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Title: The Manufacture of Tomato Products - Including whole tomato pulp or puree, tomato catsup, chili sauce, tomato soup, trimming pulp
Author: Hier, W. G.
Language: English
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PRODUCTS ***



                   The Manufacture of Tomato Products
  _INCLUDING_ Whole Tomato Pulp or Puree, Tomato Catsup, Chili Sauce,
                       Tomato Soup, Trimming Pulp


                                  _BY_

                               W. G. HIER

    _Technologist in the Canning and Preserving of Tomato Products_

  Formerly Chief Chemist and District Factory Supervisor of The T. A.
                     Suider Preserve Co. of Chicago

[Illustration]

                              Published by
                               W. G. HIER
                      2324 South Columbine Street
                            Denver, Colorado



                             COPYRIGHT 1919
                                   BY
                               W. G HIER


                                 DENVER
                 THE BROCK-HAFFNER PRESS CO., PRINTERS
                                  1919



                                Preface


The past ten years have seen revolutionary changes made in the tomato
product manufacturing business. Old methods of making tomato pulp,
catsup, chili sauce, etc. have been discarded, and the modern plant
presents a very striking contrast to the plant of former days.

In this book I have tried to present all the methods used which have
merit, and to bring forth the advantages and disadvantages of each so
that the packer can weigh them and decide which is best to use under the
conditions which obtain at his plant. In some cases one method is
universally applicable and has advantages which stamp it as superior,
but more often varying conditions of manufacture in different localities
make it impossible to recommend any one method for everyone.

In writing the text I have had to rely almost entirely on the experience
gained during the seven years in which I have been engaged in the
manufacture of these products, as there are no books on the subject, and
Howard and Mr. C. H. Stephenson of the Bureau of Chemistry, U. S.
Department of Agriculture, on the sorting and washing of tomatoes, the
handling of tomato trimmings, and the effect of proper and improper
sorting and washing on the content of micro-organisms as determined by
microscopical examination.

I wish to thank Mr. B. J. Howard of the Bureau of Chemistry for the
valuable suggestions and information he gave me with reference to
portions of the text of Chapter II and Chapter VII, and also to thank
the Bureau of Chemistry for permission to use many of their
photomicrographs and photographs.

                                                             W. G. HIER.

  April 22, 1919.



                                 PART I
             The Manufacture of Whole Tomato Pulp or Puree



                           Table of Contents


                                 PART I

              THE MANUFACTURE OF WHOLE TOMATO PULP OR PUREE


                                                                    PAGE

 CHAPTER I. OBTAINING GOOD TOMATO STOCK                                1

   Value of good tomato stock—plant raising—use of
   fertilizer—methods in east and west—shipping tomatoes—tomato
   crates—degrees of ripeness for shipping—careful handling at
   factory—varieties—storing tomatoes—stemless tomatoes.


 CHAPTER II. WASHING AND SORTING                                       8

   Washing and sorting equipment—rotary washer—water bath with
   compressed air—importance of agitation—plain sorting belt—number
   of sorters—tomato turning device—divided sorting
   belt—sorting—forms of decay—cleanliness of equipment—molds,
   yeasts and spores, and bacteria.


 CHAPTER III. PRINCIPAL METHODS IN USE FOR PULPING                    20

   Cold pulping—care of cyclone—hot pulping—advantages claimed for
   hot pulping—objections to hot process—crushing—conveying to
   kettle—value of pumice.


 CHAPTER IV. CONDENSING THE STRAINED OR CRUSHED TOMATOES              26

   Vacuum pan—types of open kettles—steam pressure—copper jacketed
   kettles—tinning kettles—advantages of various types of
   kettles—glass-lined tank—cypress tank—cleaning kettles—coil
   leaks—starting the cooking—methods of gauging finishing
   point—cooking to gauge on kettle—cooking a definite length of
   time—determining specific gravity by weight—objections to
   weighing method—testing with hydrometer—method of using
   hydrometer—finishing the cook.


 CHAPTER V. CONVEYING THE CONDENSED, STRAINED, OR CRUSHED TOMATOES
   TO THE FINISHING MACHINE, AND FINISHING SAME                       38

   Conveying to finisher—receiving tanks—finishing—screen metal for
   finisher—effect of finishing on mold count—finishing before
   cooking.


 CHAPTER VI. FILLING THE FINISHED PULP AND STORING THE CANNED
   PRODUCT                                                            41

   Filling devices for five gallons—square can and round
   can—testing for leaks—washing and steaming—filling and
   capping—handling filled cans—advantages of separating
   batches—how to stack—processing—life of cans—washing and drying
   cans—protection from dust—testing used cans—packing No. 10’s and
   No. 1’s—packing barrel pulp—metal drums—a method of preserving
   pulp in barrels.


 CHAPTER VII. THE MICRO-ORGANISMS OF TOMATO PRODUCTS; THE ATTITUDE
   OF THE PURE FOOD AUTHORITIES TOWARD THEM; AND THE INTERPRETATION
   OF ANALYSES                                                        51

   Micro-organisms; what they are—molds—bacteria—yeasts—spores—how
   germs retard their own growth—rapidity of growth—the government
   attitude on micro-organisms—government regulations—state food
   officials—checking up daily runs—how to interpret analyses.


                                 PART II

    THE MANUFACTURE OF TOMATO CATSUP, CHILI SAUCE, TRIMMING PULP, AND
                               TOMATO SOUP

 CHAPTER VIII. A DISCUSSION OF PRESERVATIVE AND NON-PRESERVATIVE
   CATSUPS; AND THE MOST FREQUENT CAUSE OF INFERIORITY                73

   Unfavorable publicity on preservatives—“natural”
   preservatives—proper acidity—processing catsups—advantage of
   benzoate catsups—causes of poor color and flavor—advantage of
   direct conversion of tomatoes into catsup—thickness—spicing and
   sweetness—“black neck”—general attractiveness.


 CHAPTER IX. A DISCUSSION OF THE INGREDIENTS OF CATSUP; WHEN AND
   HOW THEY SHOULD BE ADDED; AND THE AMOUNTS OF EACH PER 100
   GALLONS OF FINISHED CATSUP                                         80

   Measuring the volume of tomato juice—amount of tomatoes—keeping
   batches uniform—use of spices in a sack—use of spices direct and
   when to add them—use of spices in two batches—what is
   extracted—storing spices—quality of flavor—use of essential
   oils—how to add essential oils—paprika—quantities of spices and
   oils per batch—essential oils economical—adulteration of ground
   spices—onions and garlic—sugars—sugar syrups—use of sugar in
   large quantities—salt—vinegar—transference of vinegar—adding the
   vinegar—acidity—testing finishing point—holding batches—making
   catsup from pulp—use of benzoate of soda.


 CHAPTER X. FINISHING, BOTTLING, STERILIZING, AND STORING THE
   CATSUP                                                             97

   The receiving tank and finisher—filling and sealing—washing the
   filled bottles—processing—advantages of omitting
   processing—process method—time and temperature—temperature
   controlling and recording devices—non-process method—which
   method is the better?—labeling and casing—stacking catsup to
   avoid “black neck”—packing gallons and No. 10’s.


 CHAPTER XI. THE MANUFACTURE OF CHILI SAUCE AND THE PULPING OF
   TOMATO TRIMMINGS                                                  107

   Grading the tomatoes—method of handling tomatoes—amount of
   tomatoes and onions—spices—salt, sugar and vinegar—testing
   finishing point—filling, sealing and sterilizing—microscopical
   counts—pulping the trimmings—government attitude on trimming
   pulp—method of handling tomatoes when trimmings are pulped.


 CHAPTER XII. THE MANUFACTURE OF TOMATO SOUP                         112

   Convenience and economy of canned soup—factors upon which
   success depends—unpalatability—proper sweetness—gradual souring
   of pulp—sampling—proper acidity—price and quality—microscopical
   counts—beginning the cook and adding soda—butter, onions, and
   spices—sugar and salt—testing thickness before adding
   flour—adding flour—filling and processing—shaking and labeling.



                               CHAPTER I
                      OBTAINING GOOD TOMATO STOCK


                       Value of Good Tomato Stock

Obtaining a good quality of tomatoes at a price which is not prohibitive
is a problem which in many localities is becoming more difficult to
canners and catsup makers each year. Every experienced manufacturer
knows that regardless of the expertness with which he may work up his
tomatoes into the finished product, he cannot expect to get good quality
unless he has good stock to begin with. It is true that by using
intelligence and extreme care in the manufacturing processes one
manufacturer will make better pulp or catsup from tomatoes of fair
quality than another man can get from the best quality of stock. This
same care and intelligence applied, however, in working up high quality
tomatoes will probably show a greater difference in the finished
products than was apparent in the tomatoes from which these products
were made; in other words, the goodness of good tomatoes becomes
accentuated by the manufacturing process.

In order to insure as large a proportion as possible of good quality
stock, as well as a good yield per acre in tonnage, manufacturers are
each year realizing the necessity of closer co-operation with the
farmer. Where in growing tomatoes under contract it was formerly largely
up to the farmer to buy his seed and raise his plants and set them out,
it is now the usual custom to supply the farmer with seed of the desired
variety and of high germination test, and in many cases to go a step
farther and supply him with plants six to eight inches high, ready for
setting out in the field. Unquestionably, the best results are secured
by growing the plants for the farmer. The average farmer does not go
about the raising of his plants in an intelligent way, and he will not
devote the time to the plant-raising business that it should have.


                             Plant Raising

Most packers are agreed that the best plant is raised by starting the
seeds in rows in hot beds, transplanting to cold frames when they are
two to four inches high to harden them and make them stocky, and again
transplanting to the field when the plants are six to eight inches high.
This method produces a dark green, bushy, thick-stemmed plant of high
vitality, which is so essential to a good yield. What a contrast to the
average plant raised by the farmer—the seed often broadcasted, either in
a hot bed or in a spot in the garden where the soil has not been
specially prepared for plant raising, and when the plants, a large
number of which are thin, pale green, and spindly looking, attain a
height of anywhere from six inches to a foot they are all set out in the
field and allowed to struggle along as best they can. When one looks at
the kind of plants that are so often set out he can see at least one
reason why yields of from three to seven tons per acre are so often
obtained from ground which should yield twice that much, and why the
plants are easy victims to blight and other diseases.

A prominent canner recently told me that by raising the plants for his
farmers he had increased the average yield 4 tons per acre.


                           Use of Fertilizer

So many articles have been written on tomato culture for canning plants
by experienced horticulturists that the subject will not be dealt with
extensively here. In these articles emphasis is usually laid on the
desirability of the use of commercial fertilizer, not only to increase
the yield, but to hasten the maturing of the crop so that a large
proportion of it can be harvested before frost.

My experience testifies to the wisdom of this in practically all cases,
and with late maturing varieties such as the Stone tomato, in regions
subject to early frost, and especially where planted on low ground, it
is absolutely essential that fertilizer be used if a good percentage of
the crop is to be harvested.


                        Methods in East and West

In the Tri-States—that is, Delaware, Maryland, and New Jersey—quite a
different situation exists from that in the middle west or far west. The
western packer has practically all of his tomatoes grown under contract,
while the Tri-State packer, although he tries to contract as much
acreage or tonnage as possible at a reasonable figure, is up against the
competitive buying of the open market for a large proportion of his raw
stock, as there are always a large number of farmers who are willing to
gamble that the coming season will be a good one for playing the open
market. In this case the buyer usually cannot be as particular about the
quality of the tomatoes he buys as can the packer who has his tomatoes
all grown under contract at a specified price, and who can exercise
supervision over his farmers. This is particularly true in seasons of
short crop, when the grower sells his tomatoes on the market and can
afford to be very independent, and buyers are wildly forcing up the
price by competitive bidding, and taking whatever they can get. Even if
the eastern grower is under contract for his entire crop, if the crop is
short, and high prices are prevailing on the market, it is the
exceptional grower who will live up to his contract, and often to get an
excuse for breaking his contract he will deliver very poor tomatoes
right along in the hope that they will be objected to, thus giving him
the liberty of disposing of them elsewhere.

The eastern packer, however, is blessed with a longer season in which to
operate. While in the west there are seldom enough tomatoes to justify a
run at the factory before August 15th, the Tri-States packer starts in
on the early crop about the 25th of July, and his crop is not as liable
to be severely injured by an early frost as is the western crop.

Canning and preserving plants in the west, being scattered rather
sparsely over a very large territory, and being farther away from the
large centers of population than in the east, the western packer is able
to get a large percentage of his tomatoes hauled to the factory by
wagon. This is indeed a big advantage, not only in the saving of freight
and handling expense, but in the condition of the fruit when delivered
to the factory. Probably having been picked not more than twenty-four
hours before delivery, the wagon-hauled tomatoes are solid, and because
the skin is not broken by repeated handling, thus preventing the growth
of molds, they require very little sorting, in fact, no sorting at all
in some cases. A load of tomatoes which requires no sorting at all,
however, is unusual. If the packer can get his growers to use spring
wagons for hauling tomatoes, it is a big advantage, especially if the
fruit must be held any length of time at the factory. If the
wagon-hauled tomatoes can be worked up quickly the packer gets 100 per
cent value for them, which he very seldom does get on shipped tomatoes,
which commonly undergo a loss of between 5 and 20 per cent in shipment,
depending upon the time involved in shipment, the ripeness of the fruit,
the amount of handling it received, the condition of the weather, the
kind of crate in which the fruit is packed, and the amount of
ventilation it received in transit.


                           Shipping Tomatoes

Shipment by water, although slow, has the advantage of smoothness of
transit, and the crates or baskets of tomatoes are not subjected to the
frequent joltings of rail shipments, and it is to be remembered that
every jolt makes the tomatoes settle to a certain extent in the crates
and mashes the tomatoes in the bottom layers. The best car for rail
shipments is the slatted car or stock car, which permits of better
circulation than any of the other types. A box car should never be used,
as it allows the fruit to heat very badly, and there is no circulation
of air. The crates in the slatted cars should be so stacked as to allow
as much circulation of air through the car as possible. However, care
must be taken that the crates are so stacked that they will not shift. A
small air space can always be left at the end of every other row on each
side without endangering the stability of the crates, and a large air
space can be left at the top.


                             Tomato Crates

One advantage in the use of the basket over the crate in shipments is
the advantage of better circulation of air through the piled baskets of
fruit, due to the conical shape of the basket. Good ventilation is thus
supplied without danger of the baskets shifting during shipment. The
⅝-bushel basket is used almost universally in the east, while in the
west the crate holding a bushel is the common container. The
construction of the crate is a more important item than is often
thought. The most important point, of course, is strength in
construction, and the use of a wood which will not warp easily by
alternate soaking and drying out, allowing the nails to become loose and
the bottoms to begin to fall out of the crates after a half season’s
use. The slats of the crates should have rounded, smooth edges so as not
to cut the surface of the tomatoes when they are jolted and weighted
down during shipment. The slats should be only close enough together to
hold the small tomatoes, so as to permit of as much air circulation as
possible. This particularly applies to the bottom of the crates, which
become soggy and musty after a little use, and the openings soon become
clogged up with tomato substance. It is important to turn a steam hose
over the bottoms of such crates to clean them out before returning to
the point of shipment. If the empty crates pass along on a chain belt
after dumping, this steaming can be accomplished easily. Accumulated
decaying tomato substance in the bottom slats not only rots out the
crates, but contaminates otherwise good tomatoes every time the crate is
used. The crate should also be as shallow as will permit of easy
handling, so as to distribute the weight of the tomatoes over as much
surface as possible. A shallow, broad crate is preferable to a deep,
narrow one.


                    Degrees of Ripeness for Shipping

The proper degree of ripeness for tomatoes to be shipped depends, of
course, upon the length of time it will take for them to arrive at their
destination. Dead-ripe tomatoes will stand very little handling and
shipping, particularly if the weather is warm and damp, as it so
frequently is during tomato season. It is important, too, not to have
the tomatoes delivered to the shipping station too underripe, as they
are very apt to rot before they become red enough to cook up into a
product of good color. That the employee in charge of receiving tomatoes
at the shipping point should be a man of experience and good judgment as
well as tact in dealing with the farmers, is apparent. So much depends
upon the control he exercises over the farmers in getting them to pick
their fruit at the proper degree of ripeness. If he falters, is
uncertain, and changes his mind a few times, he is lost, as the farmers
soon lose confidence in his judgment.

It is always difficult to impress upon the farmer the fact that tomatoes
gain in weight during the ripening process, and the riper they have
their tomatoes the more they get in dollars when they drive up on the
scales. This argument cannot be advanced when the tomatoes are bought by
the basket, as they are in the east, but when paid for according to
weight and not volume, the ripeness of his tomatoes is an important
point for the farmer to watch. At the tail end of the season when frosts
are threatening, this argument of the increased weight of tomatoes which
are red ripe all over of course loses its effect entirely. All the
farmer is interested in at that time is in getting as many of his
tomatoes as possible accepted before a heavy frost finishes them. At
this time increased vigilance at the receiving end is necessary.


                      Careful Handling at Factory

The less handling crates or baskets of tomatoes receive, the better.
Every packer wants to eliminate handling as much as possible to conserve
labor, but when one sees the laborers around the average plant heaving
crates of tomatoes around as though they were pig iron, he wonders if
the manager fully realizes the effect of this bouncing of heavy crates
of tomatoes on to trucks, receiving platforms, etc. It is just as easy,
or almost as easy, to set the crates down gently, but the laborers who
do this work must be constantly reminded of it. You do get tired of
constantly hammering at them, but it is surely worth the effort. A
common attitude for the men to take is that the tomatoes are all going
to get mashed up anyway pretty soon, so what’s the difference. When you
consider the fact that crates of tomatoes are commonly handled from six
to eight times before they reach the sorting belt, this handling often
consisting of dropping the crates down so hard that the top tomatoes
almost bounce out, it is no wonder that when they are spread out on the
sorting belt the bottom layer of each crate is mashed and moldy, so that
half of these bottom tomatoes have to be thrown away.


                               Varieties

Any of the brilliant red varieties of tomatoes are suitable for catsup
or pulp making. Those varieties having a purplish cast should be
avoided, as they cook up into a product having a brownish color. The
smooth, round varieties, such as the Stone, are especially good for
peeling, while the flat varieties, and those having a very coarse,
uneven surface, are well suited for pulp or catsup.


                            Storing Tomatoes

For storing the tomatoes at the factory until they can be put over the
sorting belts the open-air storage is used almost universally, and it
seems to be the only method which can be economically employed at a
plant which handles large quantities of tomatoes. I have seen the wet
storage method in use at a small plant where the receipts only amount to
a few hundred bushels a day on good days, and less than a hundred on
many days when the weather is very bad, and it was liked very much by
the plant manager. The tomatoes, as soon as received, were dumped into a
large concrete tank of cold water, which was kept fairly fresh by
letting fresh water run into it constantly, with an overflow at the
other side of the tank, and a large revolving paddle at one side of the
tank kept the water in motion. Attached to this paddle was a series of
flights on an endless chain, which, when thrown into gear, carried the
tomatoes to the sorting belt.

The argument advanced in favor of the wet storage method by the operator
of this plant was that at certain times in the season their receipts of
tomatoes were very small, that is, at the beginning and at the close of
the season, and during stretches of cold, rainy weather, and at such
times they only made a run every other day, or possibly only twice a
week, and that the tomatoes kept much better in wet storage.

The tomatoes were clean when delivered to the sorting belt, and although
they received very little sorting, and only one spraying after they left
the storage tank, the count of molds, yeasts and spores and bacteria on
their pulp was fairly low.

The wet storage method could undoubtedly be used at large plants, and
might prove profitable during periods of glut, as there is no doubt but
what tomatoes will keep better in wet storage than in the open air. It
would take a lot of tanks for a large plant, however, and large
operators are not inclined to look favorably on the idea.

In open-air storage the crates of tomatoes should be stacked so as to
leave an air space between each crate, and if stacked inside of a
building, all the windows and doors should be thrown open to allow as
free a circulation of air as possible.


                           Stemless Tomatoes

Most tomatoes are delivered to the factory with the stems on, but I know
of one plant where they are all received stemless, and the quality of
the pulp made from them simply cannot be beat. There surely must be an
undesirable taste imparted by all these green stems in the cooking
process. Of course, where the cold pulping process is used, that is, the
tomatoes pulped cold directly after sorting and washing, these stems are
eliminated before any cooking is done. In the hot pulping process,
however, and when the tomatoes are put in a crusher instead of a pulp
machine, the stems are cooked along with the rest of the pulp. The
operator of the plant referred to above pays a bonus of a dollar a ton
to his contractors for having the tomatoes delivered stemless, and he
believes he gets that dollar back and more, too, in the price he gets
for his product, which is very fancy.



                               CHAPTER II
                          WASHING AND SORTING


                     Washing and Sorting Equipment

A great many outfits for washing and sorting tomatoes have been placed
on the market, some of which have many good points, and others are very
inadequate. The type of washer best adapted to one plant may not be the
best for another one. If tomatoes are grown on clay ground a friction
washer is necessary, while for fruits grown on sandy soil it is very
infrequent that much friction is needed to properly clean the tomatoes.

As to sorting belts, as a rule one type will serve as well in one place
as in another. A majority of the sorting belts used are subject to many
criticisms; some are too narrow, some too short, some travel at a speed
of 100 feet or more per minute, while others move as slowly as 10 feet
per minute. The latter speed is much better than the former, although
both are extremes, 25 feet per minute being about right.


                             Rotary Washer

For tomatoes grown on clay ground the cylindrical rotary washer or
squirrel cage type made of 1–inch mesh heavy wire is very satisfactory.
When tomatoes come to the plant caked with clay, as they are after a
hard rain followed by strong sunshine, a friction washer of this type is
about the only thing that will clean them. This type of washer also does
excellent work on late tomatoes, and this applies to all localities. A
large percentage of late tomatoes become deeply cracked at the stem end,
and although these cracks, or fissures, usually appear to be healed
over, an examination will generally reveal the presence of mold in them,
and in many cases large tufts of mold like cotton completely filling
them. By merely passing such tomatoes through a water bath, even though
the water is thoroughly agitated by means of many inlets of compressed
air, this imbedded mold will be scarcely affected. A rotary, heavy wire,
reel washer, inclined at an angle of about 1 foot in 8, and rotating
slowly, with a heavy, sharp spray of water striking the rolling tomatoes
from the time they are dumped in until they roll out, will take out a
very large proportion of this mold, besides cleaning the entire surface
of the tomato thoroughly.

The washer should deliver about two bushels of tomatoes per minute to
the sorting belt. As the wire cylinder revolves, the tomatoes are
carried half way up the side and are then thrown back again, being
carried slowly and steadily toward the outlet. A 1½-inch pipe at the top
of the cylinder, and running from end to end, with small holes bored at
intervals of an inch, should direct a sharp, cutting shower of water on
the tomatoes as they revolve and rub each other. A fine, sharp spray
will accomplish more than a less forceful but larger stream of water
coming from a larger opening. The dirt, mold, etc. is washed through the
wire mesh into a drip pan, and thence to the sewer.

Some of the rotary washers used are of solid metal, and others
constructed of wooden slats have been used. Both of these should be
avoided, as the solid metal produces a sliding, instead of a rolling
action, and the wooden slats mold quickly and become slimy. Also, some
of the washers are slightly too narrow, and the tomatoes are so crowded
while they are rotating that many of them do not come in contact with
the wire, but merely roll on top of other tomatoes. Other washers are
considerably wider than necessary. If the tomatoes are to be fed to the
belt at the rate of 2 bushels per minute, a reel (squirrel cage) washer
2 to 2½ feet in diameter, and about 8 feet long, having an inclination
of about 1 foot in 8, and revolving at about 20 revolutions per minute,
will usually give satisfactory results. These are the figures
recommended by Mr. Howard of the Bureau of Chemistry, who has made a
very extensive study of the efficiency of rotary washers.

By having the tomatoes thoroughly clean, with no mud and scarcely any
mold adhering to the surface when they drop on the sorting belt, the
amount of sorting required is not only greatly lessened, but the spots
of black rot and other forms of decay show up prominently on the
surface.

It is important that the reel deliver the tomatoes to the sorting belt
at a uniform rate, which is seldom done when the crates are dumped into
the reel without any system of timing them. At present a hopper for
feeding the reel is being experimented with, and it is hoped that it
will be an improvement over the uncontrolled system that is now used.

The chief objection made to the reel cylinder is that when tomatoes are
overripe, having been shipped a long distance, or held at the factory
for a day or two, the rubbing action of the wire on the tomatoes, and of
the tomatoes against each other, is too severe, and considerable tomato
substance is lost by being forced down through the wire mesh by the
sharp sprays of water from overhead. The loss in this case is not nearly
as great as would be imagined, and what tomato substance is thus lost
should be discarded anyway, as it is so soft that in all probability the
fiber is permeated with growths of mold, yeasts, and bacteria, which no
amount of washing would eliminate.


                     Water Bath With Compressed Air

The reel washer is not so common in the east as in the west, and the
reason is, as previously stated, that during the greater part of the
season at least, tomatoes grown on loose, sandy soil can be washed
satisfactorily by other devices which are less cumbersome and can be
more easily rigged up. One of these devices which is in satisfactory
operation is a shallow water bath through which the tomatoes pass on a
chain carrier, and in which the water is kept “boiling” (that is, it has
the appearance of boiling) by compressed air which is forced into the
water bath through small pipes, and at a number of different places. The
tomatoes are thus bounced around and knocked against each other in a
very lively manner and receive a thorough cleansing. It is very
doubtful, however, if this device would give such good results on
tomatoes that had clay baked hard on the surface, or on those which had
mold deeply imbedded in cracks at the stem end.


                        Importance of Agitation

It is always advisable to wash the tomatoes before sorting them, as it
makes the sorter’s work so much easier. After the tomatoes leave the
sorting belt they can pass under a few strong sprays which will put on
the finishing touches. Warm or hot water is sometimes used in washing
tomatoes, but cold water does the work just as well. Neither will
accomplish much more than wetting the surface unless the tomatoes are
agitated. Some devices which I have seen are almost worse than nothing,
as they merely consist of a long water bath through which the tomatoes
are conveyed by means of a large worm or helicoid. The tomatoes are not
only washed insufficiently, but are contaminated by rubbing against the
surface of the worm, which soon becomes coated with a film of mold, and,
being enclosed in a cylinder, this worm cannot be cleaned as it should
be. It is essential that every part of the equipment with which the
tomatoes come in contact be readily accessible to the brush and the
steam hose. Mold accumulates very rapidly, clings very tenaciously to
the surface on which it grows, and a damp surface in a dark place is
ideal for its growth.


                           Plain Sorting Belt

The type of sorting belt used most commonly is the ordinary plain wire
or metal belt 18 to 24 inches in width and about 10 to 12 feet in
length. Canvas belts are also used quite frequently, but the packer can
now obtain wire belts of such strong, sturdy construction that they give
scarcely any trouble and are very satisfactory in every way. Eighteen to
twenty inches has been found to be about the best width.


                           Number of Sorters

The number of sorters which should be employed on each belt depends upon
whether they are going to do both the inspecting and trimming, or the
inspecting alone, and also upon the rate at which the tomatoes are fed
to the belt, the length of the belt, and the quality of the fruit. Some
pulp makers prefer to feed the belt at a uniform rate regardless of the
quality of the fruit and to vary the number of sorters, employing about
14 or 16 to a belt when the quality is poor, and about half that number
when the tomatoes are almost entirely sound and need very little
trimming done to them. Others prefer to use the same number of sorters
and trimmers on the belt all the time and to vary the speed of the belt
according to the quality of the fruit, using a variable speed
transmission for this purpose. When running on solid fruit, with very
little decay, the maximum speed can be employed, say 40 feet per minute,
and when running on stock that is not so good the speed can be decreased
to about 10 feet per minute.

The Bureau of Chemistry advises very strongly against the practice of
having the women who do the inspecting do the trimming also. They
contend that inspecting and trimming should be two distinct and separate
operations and each should be done by a different set of women. By this
method the women on the sorting belt merely pick out all the tomatoes
which are imperfect and throw them into receiving boxes which are
attached to the framework of the sorting belt by a bracket, there being
about four of these boxes to a table—two on each side. One or two women
stand at each receiving box, pick out the defective tomatoes from this
box, and trim out the bad part, which is dropped into a chute, which
directs the material down to a drain underneath the table through which
is flowing the waste water from the rotary washer. This stream, properly
placed, has sufficient current to carry away the waste matter. The
trimmer throws the good part of the tomato back on to the sorting belt.
By using this system there is no lugging of boxes or buckets back and
forth from the sorting table.

This method, which is the one approved by the Bureau of Chemistry,
accomplishes the work more thoroughly than can be done if the inspecting
and trimming are all done on the sorting belt by the same set of women.
The minimum cost of sorting and trimming in this manner is from 2 to 3
cents per bushel, according to the government figures.

If the women on the sorting belt are to be used for both inspecting and
trimming, a longer belt should be used than if inspecting alone is to be
done. About 2 feet of belt should be allowed to each sorter.


                         Tomato Turning Device

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1.—Tomato turning device on sorting belt.
]

There is another feature which helps greatly in sorting, and that is a
tomato turning device, which is illustrated in Figure 1. This device
turns a very large percentage of the tomatoes if they are fed to the
belt properly, that is, if they are spread out evenly and are not too
thick on the belt. The turning device allows them to be inspected from
all angles, and is described in Bulletin 569 of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture as follows:

“For an apron (sorting belt) 18 inches wide, 14 pieces of ¾ inch iron
pipe (1 inch outside) were cut, each piece about 7 inches long. About
one-half inch from one end of each piece a hole was drilled through the
pipe large enough to permit of the pipes being strung on a ¼ inch steel
rod. In order to insure freedom of movement, a thin washer was placed
between each pipe and the one next to it. The whole set was then
suspended by means of the steel rod across the sorting apron with the
lower ends one-half inch above the apron. A back-stop rod is put in
behind the set to prevent the pipes from swinging back past the center.
This was found necessary to prevent them from swinging so far back as to
strike and gouge the oncoming tomatoes. * * * In operation the weight of
the pipes is sufficient to roll the tomatoes over as they pass under.”

“In order to obtain satisfactory operation it is most important that the
tomatoes do not cover more than 50 per cent of the apron area, otherwise
they do not have room to turn properly. A test at one plant showed that
70 to 80 per cent of the tomatoes were turned each time they passed
under a set of the pipes. It was found also that this turning device
worked better on the open metal apron than on the canvas or rubber type,
owing to the fact that the tomatoes slipped badly on aprons made of
canvas or rubber.”


                          Divided Sorting Belt

There is a modification of the plain belt which is in use at several
plants, and which some operators like very much. This belt is
illustrated in Fig. 2. Note that it is divided into three partitions by
two boards which run lengthwise. These boards are about 3 inches high
and are raised a fraction of an inch above the belt so as to allow the
belt to slide under them easily. At the head of the belt the board
partitions connect in a “V”. The tomatoes strike this V and are guided
into the two outer channels, where they are given a hasty inspection by
the first four sorters, who throw all those which are perfectly sound
into the center partition. As the tomatoes which remain in the two
outside partitions pass down to the rest of the sorters they are
inspected, the bad parts cut out, and the good part thrown into the
center partition. The bad parts which are cut out are left on the
outside partitions, where they are carried along into two waste barrels,
which are provided for this purpose at the end of the belt.

[Illustration: FIG·2 DIVIDED SORTING BELT]

By using this method no tomatoes but good ones can go through unless bad
ones are carelessly thrown into the center partition and every tomato
HAS to be picked up. Of course, some bad tomatoes are thrown into the
center carelessly, where they will remain unless taken out by the final
inspector, who is supposed to watch this. However, the number which are
thus thrown in are not great if the first four women on the belt are
trained as they should be—that is, to only throw those tomatoes in the
center which a hasty inspection shows are perfectly sound, and to leave
all doubtful ones pass by.

By this method each good tomato is only inspected once, which is not the
case with any of the other systems, and in that respect it is more
efficient. One good tomato is not picked up, looked at, and placed on
the belt again by a number of different sorters. When a tomato is picked
up by a sorter some disposition is made of it at once. If good it is
tossed in the center and is never looked at again except by the final
inspector. If bad, the good part is thrown in the center and the bad
allowed to remain on the outside, to be conducted to the waste barrel.
All the sorters except the first four can spend their entire time
working on tomatoes which need to have bad parts cut out of them.

The main objection which is made to the divided belt system is that the
first four women get careless and throw unsound tomatoes into the center
partition and they are never looked at again. However, if care is used
in the selection of these women, and a reliable sorter is placed at the
end of the belt to inspect the center partition before it leaves the
belt, such carelessness can be checked and held down to a minimum.
Another objection that is advanced is that there is the possibility of
partly good tomatoes going into the waste barrels due to the fact that
the women might not always keep up on them. In my experience with the
system I have had practically no trouble in this regard. If a long belt
is used, as many trimmers as desired can be put on, and the belt can be
slowed down or the rate at which it is fed slowed up if the tomatoes are
running particularly bad. Then, in extreme cases, it is always possible
to have someone go over the waste barrels before they are dumped.

An average grade of tomatoes can be handled quite rapidly by the divided
belt system. Some packers who have used it several seasons like it very
much, and an analysis of their product will generally show a low count
of molds, yeasts and spores, and bacteria. I understand, also, that
other packers that have used the method have discarded it.


                                Sorting

By far the greater part of the trouble packers have with their goods not
complying with the government regulations as to molds, yeasts and
spores, and bacteria is due to inadequate sorting. At least ninety per
cent of this trouble could be overcome right at the sorting belt.
Packers often say they can’t understand why the mold is running high on
their pulp and catsup, as they are sorting their tomatoes carefully.
However, the chances are ten to one the trouble is they are not sorting
them carefully enough. One who has not had much experience managing help
on the tomato sorting belt would imagine that almost any woman could
step up there and sort out the good tomatoes from the bad, and know what
to cut out, and what not to cut out. But such is not the case. The
tomato sorters must be instructed. Someone who is competent to do so
must work with each one of them and show them just what is a good tomato
and what is not. Otherwise they will be spending part of their time
cutting out black, fibrous growths on the surface of the tomatoes which
are absolutely normal and entirely free from molds, etc., and allowing
tomatoes to pass by them which have black spots on the surface no bigger
than a dime, but indicating to the trained eye that probably half of the
tomato is eaten up with black rot. They will allow a tomato to pass by
which is cracked open, and the edge of the skin on each side of the
crack will be as white as a piece of paper. Unless they are instructed,
they may not realize that this is mold, and they certainly will not
realize the amount of damage a small percentage of tomatoes like that
can do. They know nothing about mold counts, but most women can be
impressed with the importance of watching for moldy streaks and spots in
mashed and split tomatoes, and the importance of eliminating every bit
of tomato tissue that is so effected.

Every sorting belt should have a boss—a competent sorter who knows his
or her business, and who stands at the end of the belt and inspects the
tomatoes just as they are about to leave the belt. This person can order
the speed at which the tomatoes are fed to the sorters increased or
decreased according to the quality, can see just what form of decay is
predominating and caution the sorters to watch out for it, can see the
mistakes that are being made in the sorting and try to correct them, and
in addition can throw out into a receptacle such bad tomatoes as have
passed by the sorters so that they can be sorted over again. It is not
safe to put a bunch of women on the sorting belt with no one in
authority who is on that particular job every minute, and expect an
entire day’s run to come within the government limits.


                             Forms of Decay

There are many forms of rot, but the most common are the black rot, soft
rot, and the mold growths in cracked tomatoes, either those which have
cracked deeply around the stem end during their growth, or have been
cracked or mashed in shipment. Just as soon as the skin is broken,
either in a natural or unnatural way, molds start growing on that broken
surface immediately, and develop very rapidly.

There is also the brown spotted tomato, which is not so common, but
which has been very bad in some localities. I remember one field of
tomatoes in southern Ohio several years ago which was absolutely
worthless for canning purposes, due to the fact that practically all of
the tomatoes were covered with brown spots, and under each one of these
spots was a lump of white mold and mold spores. This field was plowed up
before half of the tomatoes were picked, as the pulp plant which had
contracted them refused to receive any more after having cooked several
batches of pulp on which the mold ran very high due to this condition,
which had never been met with before. The brown spots were soft and
concave, and if once the character of the spot was fixed in the memory
one could never fail to quickly detect that type of tomato if it was run
across again.

The disease appeared in both central and southern Indiana the following
year and I sent samples of the tomatoes to the Department of Agriculture
at Washington and to the Indiana state experiment station, but it was
new to them and they had no remedy for it. Whether it has appeared since
I do not know, but it was very bad while it lasted. It is almost
impossible to sort such tomatoes, as the spots are so numerous on the
surface, and every spot would have to be cut out. When the spots are
small, as they frequently are, they are very apt to pass by the sorters
unnoticed, or at any rate considered harmless, but it doesn’t take many
bushels of such tomatoes to send a batch over the limit in mold count.

Extremely soft spots which will yield to very slight pressure with the
finger are usually receptacles for the growth of yeasts and bacteria and
should be cut out. Nine times out of ten such spots are offensive to the
nose when the skin of the tomato is broken. However, one quickly learns
to pick them out by sight.

It is important that the sorting belt be well lighted with 100–watt
lamps overhead provided with large reflectors. On dark days good sorting
is impossible unless the belt is adequately lighted, and, of course, for
sorting in the early morning or late evening adequate light is
absolutely essential.


                        Cleanliness of Equipment

To dwell upon the necessity of thoroughly cleaning all washing and
sorting equipment each night, as well as to frequently change the water
in water baths, in case a water bath is used, would seem almost
unnecessary, yet there are many packers who do not comprehend the
trouble that can be caused by inadequate cleaning of the washing,
sorting, and conveying equipment.

Does the sorting and washing equipment in every pulp plant impart a
clean, fresh, sweet smell when the morning’s work is begun? It does not,
and the reason is that it was not properly cleaned the night before.
Those surfaces which were easy to get at and which are easily seen in a
hasty inspection are clean, of course, but how about the dark corners
and almost inaccessible places that are hard to clean? Can you run your
fingernail over the surface of one of the bucket conveyors, or
“flights,” for example, and scrape off a thin, slimy film? If you can,
you can be sure it is mold, and that the only way to get it off is with
a very stiff brush—even a wire one may be necessary—hot water, and soda
ash. If the bucket conveyors or “flights” are covered with a thin film
of mold, the tomatoes will carry along a small part of this mold with
them every time the conveyor is used, and as fast as the mold is rubbed
off the conveyor by the tomatoes more mold will grow on again.

The same care should be taken with this equipment as is given to the
equipment in a milk bottling or condensing plant. My experience has been
that the only safe way to check up the thoroughness of the cleaning job
is to go over it with a spot light, with particular attention to the
most inaccessible parts, and to do everything possible to make every
part of the equipment accessible.


                 Molds, Yeasts and Spores, and Bacteria

An understanding of the nature of molds, yeasts and spores, and bacteria
is very helpful to any packer. A knowledge of the rapidity of their
growth and the conditions under which they multiply most rapidly is also
helpful. The average packer has a very vague idea of this subject, yet
it is easy of comprehension. In CHAPTER VII a discussion of it will be
found, which it is hoped will help to clear up the misty atmosphere
surrounding this subject, and in the same chapter the government
attitude toward micro-organisms is also discussed.



                              CHAPTER III
                  PRINCIPAL METHODS IN USE FOR PULPING


The chief methods in use for preparing the tomatoes for the cooking
kettle are: first, cold pulping; second, hot pulping; third, crushing
without cycloning.


                              Cold Pulping

The cold pulping method is probably the most common, and requires less
equipment than the hot method, with results that are considered by many
packers just as good, if the pulp machine is operated by a careful man
who will not feed it too fast, and who will keep it clean. Sometimes,
with this method, the tomatoes are run through a crusher before pulping,
and sometimes not.


                            Care of Cyclone

It is important that the outlet from the receiving box under the cyclone
be directly from the bottom, and not from the side of the box near the
bottom. The box must drain completely so as not to leave any tomato
juice lying in it to ferment. A tapering enamel lined receptacle which
drains itself completely is best to use under the cyclone.

The steam hose should be turned into both the cyclone and receiving box
several times during the day to arrest growths of micro-organisms, and
clean out adhering tomato fiber. It is particularly important to do this
just before the noon hour, as considerable fermentation can take place
in the cyclone during that hour if it is not cleaned out beforehand.


                              Hot Pulping

By the hot pulping method the tomatoes are conveyed, usually by means of
a series of “flights,” or a bucket conveyor, to “breaking tanks” which
are arranged above the cyclones. These “breaking tanks” hold about 1000
gallons, and are usually constructed of cypress. At the bottom of the
tank are open brass steam pipes running horizontally in four directions.
These pipes are about two feet in length, and are open at the ends so
that the steam comes directly in contact with the tomatoes. The tomatoes
are conveyed direct from the sorting belt to the “breaking tanks,” and
as soon as the brass pipes are covered the steam is turned on full and
the breaking up process begins. It usually takes about 30 minutes to
break up the tomatoes, and they are then cycloned. The tank should have
a concave bottom and large outlet, preferably 3 inch, so that the broken
up tomatoes can be let out of the tank easily. Iron pipes should, of
course, be avoided, as the acid of the tomato attacks the iron,
producing an iron salt which is apt to discolor the product,
particularly if it is to be used for catsup, and this dissolved iron
comes in contact with the tannic acid of the spices. This will be
discussed further under the manufacture of catsup.

Some packers object to brass and copper coming in contact with the
tomatoes on account of the slight amount of copper which goes into
solution by the action of the tomato acid. In the case of the “breaking
tank,” however, the few short brass pipes offer a very small surface to
the action of the tomato acid, and the amount of metal dissolved would
be negligible. These brass pipes can be plated with tin if it is desired
to avoid contact with brass altogether, and this is frequently done.


                   Advantages Claimed for Hot Pulping

Those who use the hot pulping method like it for a number of reasons. In
the first place, the tomatoes are brought to a boil while they are still
whole, and this eliminates any chance of fermentation due to the
crushing of the tomatoes before they are cooked. By bringing the
tomatoes to a boil quickly, that is, as soon as the washing and sorting
is completed, any incipient fermentation is arrested immediately. As the
tomato juice is near the boiling point when it is cycloned and delivered
to the cooking kettles, no multiplication of yeasts, bacteria, etc. can
take place between the sorting and the final condensing, unless the
juice is allowed to cool considerably at some point between the
“breaking tank” and the cooking kettle.

Another advantage claimed for the hot process is that the pulp of the
tomato is more completely separated from the seed and skin than when the
tomatoes are pulped cold, and therefore the tomatoes will give a
slightly larger yield of pulp. It is also claimed that a better color
can be obtained by the hot pulping process, as the color cells of the
tomato lie in greatest abundance directly next to the skin, and by
making a clean cut separation of the skin from these color cells by
boiling in a “breaking tank,” none of this color will be lost in the
pumice during the cycloning. Although this argument does appear
reasonable, I have failed to see that tomatoes which are pulped by the
hot process give any better color than those which are pulped cold.

The hot process is also liked where the tomatoes are to be manufactured
directly into catsup or tomato soup, as the “breaking tank” can be
filled up to a certain mark with the boiling tomatoes and that gives the
measure of tomatoes for the catsup or soup batch, and no other measuring
devices for this purpose need be employed.


                       Objections to Hot Process

The chief objection to the hot process is that it requires a lot of
additional tanks for breaking the tomatoes, which are entirely dispensed
with when cold pulping is used. The tanks are not only an additional
expense to the equipment, but require one or two operators to tend to
them, and they take up a lot of room, and consume a lot of steam. No
seed can be saved from tomatoes which are pulped hot, as the cooking
either kills the germ or renders it impotent. Quite a few canners save
the seed from cold pulped tomatoes, and the revenue from it proves to be
a profitable item.

As to whether the slightly increased yield to be obtained by the hot
pulping method, and the decreased danger of multiplication of yeasts and
bacteria, more than compensate for the advantages to be obtained by the
cold process is a question which the individual packer must decide for
himself.


                                Crushing

Crushing the tomatoes without cycloning them is a very good method where
the tomatoes are going to be made into pulp or puree, as the finishing
machine will convert the crushed cooked tomatoes into a very smooth
product. Where catsup is to be made direct from the tomatoes, however,
cycloning is to be preferred to crushing. If the final product is to be
soup, cycloning is necessary. This will be discussed further in the
chapters on catsup and soup.

When a crusher is used it takes the place of the cyclone or pulp
machine, although it performs an entirely different kind of an
operation, and the tomatoes go through exactly the same process as in
cold pulping, except that instead of removing the seeds and skins from
the tomatoes before cooking, the tomatoes are chopped very fine and
conveyed to the cooking kettles—seeds, skin and all. It is obviously
somewhat harder to gauge the finishing point of a batch of pulp where
the skins and seeds are present, however a little practice largely
eliminates this difficulty, and there is always the method of
determining the specific gravity by weight to fall back on. The seeds
and skins will not interfere with making the specific gravity test as it
is usually carried out in the cook room with a large copper flask, small
trip balance, and set of weights.


                          Conveying to Kettle

If the plant is so arranged that the pulped or crushed tomatoes can be
conveyed to the cooking kettles by gravity, that is an advantage, as it
does away with a pump and someone to tend to it, and the fewer the
pumps, the better; however, in most plants it is necessary to pump the
pulped or crushed stock into the cooking kettles. Unless the plant
consists of several floors and the tomatoes start at the top and come
out as finished pulp at the bottom, or the plant is built on a terraced
plan, as one plant is in Indiana, which is built on the side of a hill,
it is necessary to do a certain amount of pumping. An ordinary pump will
not do, as there would be contamination by iron, and considerable
rusting, while the pump was idle, of those parts of the pump with which
tomato juice comes in contact, this rust to be carried along with the
tomato juice the first time the pump is used again. The rotary pump
constructed partly of bronze or nickel is very good for this purpose,
and offers as little opportunity for metallic contamination as any pump
does.

The pipe used for the conveying of this tomato stock should by all means
be enamel lined. Enamel lined pipe, if properly made, will last for many
years without chipping or cracking. Just how long it will last on the
average I cannot say, but I have often taken down lines of enamel lined
pipe that have been in use for several years, and it looked practically
as good as new. The flanged pipe with flanged fittings is better than
that with the ordinary screw ends, as it makes practically a continuous
white tube without any pipe threads in which molds, yeasts, and bacteria
can lodge and multiply.

Wooden troughs are still used in many plants for conveying tomato juice
and pulp, but they are a relic of the old days, and have no place in the
modern pulp or catsup plant. Wooden troughs are hard to keep clean, they
mold very quickly after they become damp, they are open to contamination
from ceilings and roofs which aren’t always in good condition, and they
are usually wasteful. It will pay any packer who still uses even a few
wooden troughs to invest in enamel lined pipe. Wooden pipe is also
unsanitary for this purpose, as mold grows in it and clings so tightly
to the porous, damp surface that it cannot possibly be flushed out.


                            Value of Pumice

This chapter, which deals principally with cycloning, seems to be a
fitting place to discuss the value of the pumice which comes as a waste
product from the cyclone. Although it has been repeatedly demonstrated
by chemical analysis that this pumice or tomato waste is a valuable
by-product, every time the question has come up of its utilization and
preparation into a salable product or products, the decision has been
that the expense involved would be too great to make it pay. This
by-product is profitably handled in Italy, producing an oil of
commercial value, and an oil cake which is used for stock feed; however,
the conditions in Italy and in this country are very different. In the
Parma district of Italy there are forty factories very close together,
and little expense is involved in bringing the waste to a central point
where enough of it can be had to keep a drying outfit and an oil press
or oil extraction outfit busy. Labor is also very cheap and plentiful,
and there is a ready market for the product, the oil being used as a
soap stock, and the oil cake finding ready sale as a stock feed. In this
country, however, there is not enough waste at even one of the largest
plants to pay for the operation of a drying outfit and the pulp plants
are so scattered that hauling or shipping charges to a central point
would be expensive. Furthermore, labor is scarce and expensive.

That quite a little labor is involved in the preparation of the waste is
soon discovered by a little experimenting. As the waste ferments quickly
it must be handled as produced, or preserved in some way, which would be
a questionable operation, as the oil cake is used for stock feed. As the
skins are practically valueless, they must be separated from the seeds
in which all the value lies. This separation can either be carried out
in the moist state by a gravity separation in water, in which the seeds,
being heavy, sink, and the skins float; or by the use of a fanning mill
after drying, in which case the dried skins, being very light, are blown
out. Before drying either the seeds alone or the unseparated waste, the
excess moisture must be pressed out with a hydraulic press. The pressed
product must then be broken up and put through a steam or hot air dryer
of the rotary, cylindrical type. After the seeds are dried to a 10 per
cent moisture basis they must then be ground, and the oil extracted
either by pressure, or by dissolving it out with a chemical agent, such
as carbon tetrachloride. The oil cake which remains would then be sacked
for stock feed.

This briefly gives an idea of the labor involved, and the difficulties
surrounding the situation. It may be successfully worked out some time,
but will require close co-operation from a number of large pulp plants
which are near each other to be a success. Some plants are giving the
waste to farmers if they will haul it away, and I know of one farmer who
has for years fattened a bunch of hogs cheaply during the tomato season
in this way. It is a queer thing, though, that most farmers turn up
their noses at the idea.

The seed, when dried to a 10 per cent moisture basis, contains about 23
per cent protein and from 20 to 25 per cent of fat. After the fat is
extracted the protein in the cake will run close to 30 per cent.

In a test made by the U. S. Department of Agriculture the ground cake
ran 37 per cent in protein, which puts it in about the same class with
cottonseed meal. They also refined some of the oil and are of the
opinion that it has the qualities of an edible oil.

If a factory uses the cold pulping method the most profitable way to
handle the pumice is to ferment it and then separate the seed and dry
it, and use it for planting the following season. Care must be taken,
however, to keep out undesirable strains and varieties foreign to the
one which is being grown.



                               CHAPTER IV
              CONDENSING THE STRAINED OR CRUSHED TOMATOES


                               Vacuum Pan

Practically all of the tomato products made in this country are cooked
in an open kettle under atmospheric pressure—either a copper-jacketed
kettle, or a tank with a closed coil. The vacuum pan is used, however,
in several plants, and makes a very high grade product—a better product
as a rule than can be made by condensing under atmospheric pressure.
When tomato juice is condensed in vacuum it boils at anywhere from 54
degrees F. to 175 degrees F., depending upon the degree of vacuum
obtained. At sea level, under atmospheric pressure, it boils at 212
degrees F. By employing a low temperature, and condensing rapidly, which
can be done in the vacuum pan, the natural bright red color of the
tomatoes is affected very little by the cooking. High temperatures and
continued boiling are the agents which destroy tomato color as well as
flavor. The vacuum pan produces a pulp of not only fine color, but of
very fine flavor. The reason the vacuum method is not used more
frequently than it is is undoubtedly due to the difficulty in getting
the vacuum equipment, and also to the expense of the equipment when it
can be obtained.


                         Types of Open Kettles

The open kettle method produces a very satisfactory product when the
proper precautions are taken, and if the cooking and subsequent
processes are carried out intelligently, the finished product compares
very favorably with that which is condensed in vacuum. The types of
kettles in most common use are the copper jacketed kettle, the
glass-lined tank with closed copper coil, and the cypress tank with
closed copper coil. All of these give good results where the jacket or
coil is properly constructed, the steam trap is of the right type and
takes care of all of the condensation without allowing it to back up
into the coil, and the kettle has a good head of steam so that a
vigorous boil can be maintained throughout the cooking.


                             Steam Pressure

If the steam pressure at the boiler is kept above 75 lbs., and too much
is not lost by radiation from uncovered pipes, and by leaks at poorly
packed flanges, etc., there should be no difficulty in maintaining a
vigorous boil. The evaporation should be so rapid that the vaporizing
steam will burn the hand, even if placed over the kettle for a second.
If you can hold your hand over a kettle of boiling pulp, even for a few
seconds, you can be sure that you are not getting a proper boil. A
pressure of 100 lbs. is, of course, to be preferred to 75, as it will
effect a quicker condensation, however there is not a large percentage
of boilers in tomato pulp plants that are permitted to carry as much as
100 lbs.

The kettles should be close to the boiler room, and the steam pipes
feeding them should be as straight and short as possible, and covered
with magnesia pipe covering to prevent excessive loss of heat by
radiation. It is not an uncommon sight in canning plants to see the main
pipe from the boiler to the cooking kettles pass through an areaway
between two buildings, and have no protective covering whatever. Such
sights, however, are becoming more infrequent, as packers are plugging
up many of the leaks through which dollars have escaped every day in
years gone by. The condensation from the steam traps can, of course, be
used right over again in the boilers.


                        Copper-Jacketed Kettles

Copper-jacketed kettles used for condensing tomato products range all
the way from 50 gallons capacity to 500 gallons, the larger size making
a batch of finished pulp of about 250 gallons as a rule. A larger batch
than this can be cooked in a 500–gallon kettle, but it is not advisable
to keep pumping fresh tomato juice into the kettle too long, as it gives
too long a cook to the first that goes in. Forty-five minutes should be
the absolute limit for a batch of pulp, no matter what kind of a kettle
it is cooked in, and it is much better to confine the cooking time to 30
minutes or less. The shorter the cook, the better the color and flavor
of the finished product, other things being equal.


                            Tinning Kettles

Copper kettles are frequently lined with block tin to prevent the acid
of the tomato from dissolving some of the copper. The desirability of
this is argued both from a standpoint of health and flavor, as dissolved
copper, even in small quantity, has a very bitter taste. It should be
remembered, however, that the acid of the tomato, which is generally
thought to be citric acid, is a weak organic acid, and the amount of
copper dissolved in a batch cooked not over an hour is exceedingly
small; certainly so small as to have no ill effect upon health. As to
the question of flavor, it would indeed take a very delicate palate to
detect among a half dozen samples which ones were cooked in an unlined
copper kettle, and which in a kettle lined with block tin or silver. The
latter is said to be used by some packers.

It is a good idea, however, to play safe, and line all kettles with
block tin, as we know that there is a small amount of copper taken up in
solution in the pulp. This is more important in the case of catsup and
chili sauce than where the kettles are used for pulp alone, as vinegar
and salt act on the copper much more severely than tomato acid does. As
to the thickness of the block tin lining, an inspection of the kettles
used by various packers shows this to run all the way from a good
half-inch thick to a coating so thin that in one season’s use it is
almost all scraped off by friction in cleaning the kettle. The kettles
should be plated heavy enough to last several seasons without
re-tinning, however a coating a half-inch thick is unnecessary and
wasteful of steam. The same remarks apply to the tinning of copper
coils.


                 Advantages of Various Types of Kettles

Although copper-jacketed kettles have the advantage of being very easily
cleaned, and also the advantage of wasting very little of the product
when the finished batch is being discharged, the large tanks of either
cypress or glass-lined steel are coming into use more and more because
of their greater capacity. It is true that they are very slightly more
wasteful than the jacketed kettles, but this really amounts to very
little if the tanks are built with a concave bottom. They take up no
more room than the jacketed kettles, and will hold a much larger volume,
as they can be built so much higher. If one were to buy a series of
copper-jacketed kettles to cook batches as large as are commonly cooked
in tanks equipped with copper coils, the expense would be very heavy,
there would be much exposure to metal, and the results obtained would be
no better, or possibly not as good. In the tank equipped with a coil,
batches of 300 or 400 gallons are often cooked, and the juice can
generally be condensed to a specific gravity of 1.035 in 25 to 30
minutes.


                            Glass-Lined Tank

During the last few years quite a few packers, when adding to their
cooking capacity, have put in glass-lined steel tanks. The glass-lined
tank is equipped with coil and steam trap in the same manner as the
cypress tank, and it has certain advantages which make it very nice to
work with, even though the first cost is considerably more than that of
a cypress tank of equal capacity. The only objection I have heard to the
glass-lined tank is that it radiates more heat than a wooden tank, and
on very hot days, unless it is insulated, makes the cook room more
uncomfortable than the same capacity in cypress tanks would. However,
when the tank is covered with cork insulation, or asbestos, or even wood
staves, it radiates no more heat than a cypress tank.

The glass-lined tank is perfectly sanitary, and is very easily cleaned.
It is really the most sanitary thing we have to cook in. The surface is
smooth and entirely free from any irregularities such as there are bound
to be between the staves of the cypress tank. It is always ready for
use, and does not have to be swelled and then scrubbed for a half day
after standing idle for a while before it is fit to use again. There are
no places for molds to creep in and multiply. Furthermore, being of
metal and all in one piece, a battery of glass-lined tanks will not
shake like cypress tanks will when you are running heavy and have
several tanks going full blast at the same time. This may seem rather
unimportant, but it is quite a relief to the cook and his helpers, as
they can go about their work without having their nerves rattled. Just
how long a glass-lined tank will last under average conditions in a pulp
or catsup plant is not known, as they have not been in use a great many
years for this purpose; however, one would guess that they would be
serviceable almost indefinitely.


                              Cypress Tank

Cypress tanks should be constructed of 2–inch material and made with a
sloping or concave bottom, preferably the latter. They will not impart
any foreign taste to the product, as is sometimes thought, even after
becoming charred by long usage, and if kept clean they will remain sweet
as long as they are kept in continuous use. A musty taste is sometimes
imparted to pulp or catsup cooked in a cypress tank if it has been
standing idle for a long time and is not thoroughly cleaned and boiled
out with soda before it is used again. Cypress tanks have the advantage
of being cheap, and also of having large cooking capacity.


                            Cleaning Kettles

Cooking tanks and kettles should be cleaned thoroughly after every
batch. If the steam trap is working properly the burning on the coils
and sides of the kettle will be so slight that almost all of it can be
washed off with the hose if the water pressure is strong and the hose is
bushed down to one-eighth inch. The best things to use to take off the
material which burns on hard and black is a pot chain for coils, and for
the jacketed kettles a wire brush or very stiff fiber brush does very
well. If any of the baked on pulp is not removed before the next batch
is cooked it will interfere with the cooking by lengthening the time
required to finish the batch, and by causing the coils to burn still
harder next time. The cook should be instructed to get down in the tanks
frequently, and feel underneath his coils to see that they are properly
cleaned. The manager should also make it a point to do this several
times a day. His quality will depend in no small degree on the way his
coils are cleaned.


                               Coil Leaks

Leaks in coils should be attended to immediately, as they cut down the
available steam pressure, and soon become so large that it becomes
impossible to cook satisfactorily. An ordinary soldering job will only
hold them for a day or two, and it is necessary to take out the coil and
braze it if the leak is to be permanently mended.


                          Starting the Cooking

We will say that we are now pumping over the cycloned or crushed
tomatoes into the cooking kettle. Some packers pour a cupful of
cottonseed oil in the kettle to assist in breaking the boil, others rub
the sides of the kettle with fat, such as a piece of cocoa butter, while
others use no oil or fat at all, but take care to feed the kettle slowly
and carefully, and cut the foam with a sharp spray of water from the
hose to assist in breaking the boil. The oil or fat does seem to help
some, but it is not necessary if the kettle is fed carefully. As soon as
the coil or jacket is covered the steam can be turned on full; however,
the exhaust should be opened immediately, and not closed until all the
condensation which has collected in the coil or jacket runs out and the
steam comes through perfectly dry. The condensation of the pulp should
then be conducted as rapidly as possible, pumping over more of the
tomato juice as the kettle is able to take care of it, and boiling
continuously. The eye soon learns to judge the approach of the finishing
point, and then the exact finishing point must be determined. There are
many ways of doing this, and a number of ways have been recommended. No
method can succeed which is not simple and quick, and which offers
scarcely any chance for error when used by a cook, whom, it must be
remembered, is a man of very ordinary intelligence.


                   Methods of Gauging Finishing Point

The simplest method is gauging the finishing point by the eye, but this
method is also the least accurate in the hands of the average cook.
Cooks who have had years of experience with tomato pulp sometimes get to
be very expert in gauging the finishing point by the eye, and can
determine it with surprising accuracy. Such a cook is the exception,
however, and most packers have to use some sort of a mechanical method
by which at least fair accuracy can be counted on. These methods consist
of: first, condensing the pulp to a certain mark on the kettle, a
definite volume of juice having been taken to start with; second,
cooking a certain length of time; third, determining the specific
gravity of the hot pulp by weighing a definite quantity on a small
balance; fourth, estimating the gravity by the use of a hydrometer.


                      Cooking to a Gauge on Kettle

With the first method the amount of tomato juice pumped into the kettle,
or the number of bushels of tomatoes from which this juice was derived,
must be measured. This is a nuisance, and is not necessary with any of
the other methods except the second. Furthermore, even though every
batch of pulp cooked during the season be made from a measured quantity
of tomatoes or tomato juice, and cooked to the same point on the
measuring stick, the pulp will not all be of the same specific gravity,
because tomatoes are very watery at some seasons of the year and very
firm and solid at other times. The watery tomatoes will make a thin
pulp, and the firm tomatoes will make a heavier pulp.


                   Cooking a Definite Length of Time

Cooking for a certain length of time is not dependable because the steam
pressure is not always the same, the coils do not always condense the
pulp with the same efficiency, and the character of the tomatoes varies
during the season. With this method it is also necessary to start with a
definite quantity of tomato stock for each batch.


                 Determining Specific Gravity by Weight

The third method—that of determining the specific gravity by weight—is
used as commonly as any of the others. The specific gravity of pulp
merely means the comparison between the weight of a definite volume of
the pulp and the weight of the same volume of water at the same
temperature. If pulp has a specific gravity of 1.035, that means that a
gallon of it is 1.035 times as heavy as a gallon of water.

The determination, as carried out in the cook room, is made with a small
trip balance, a set of weights, and a copper flask which is tin lined.
The weight of the empty flask is taken. Then the weight of the flask
filled to the top with boiling water is taken. The difference between
these two weights is the weight of water at the boiling point which the
flask contains. When the boiling pulp approaches the finishing point,
the flask is filled to the top with the boiling pulp. This should be
done rapidly, as the pulp cools quickly, and as it cools, decreases in
volume. The weight of the flask filled with pulp at the boiling point is
taken. This weight, minus the weight of the empty flask, equals the
weight of pulp at the boiling point which the flask contains. You now
have the weight of boiling water the flask contains, and the weight of
boiling pulp the flask contains. Divide the former into the latter, and
the result (the quotient) is the specific gravity. For example, if the
water weighs 1,000 grams, and the pulp weighs 1,035 grams, the specific
gravity is 1.035. If the specific gravity of cold pulp is taken, then
cold water of the same temperature must be taken as the comparison. The
weight of cold pulp must not be compared with the weight of hot water,
and vice versa.


                     Objections to Weighing Method

One of the objections to the use of this method is that there is usually
a certain amount of air bubbles and foam in the boiling pulp and this
causes an error, as the air takes up volume but does not weigh anything.
Another objection is that the determination is often not made rapidly
enough, with the result that while the flask is being filled with
boiling pulp, the pulp is cooling and correspondingly decreasing in
volume, and by the time the flask is full, it contains more pulp than it
should, that is, instead of containing 1,000 cubic centimeters of pulp
at 210 degrees F., it will contain about 1,010 cubic centimeters of pulp
at 200 degrees F., or possibly lower. One reason for this delay is that
the foam caused by filling the flask with boiling pulp rises in the neck
of the flask, and makes it hard to judge when the flask is exactly full.
The main difficulty with the method, however, is that pulp cooks do not
have scientific minds, they do not appreciate the importance of doing
the determination in a strictly scientific way, and the results they get
are not very accurate. I have frequently checked up on pulp cooks using
this method, and sometimes they were very decidedly off.


                        Testing With Hydrometer

The estimation of the gravity of the boiling pulp by the use of a
hydrometer is not in very general use, and it has been stated by some
scientific men that a hydrometer is no good for tomato pulp or catsup
except where the sample on which the test is made is previously filtered
so as to get a clear liquid. A test which involves filtering, is, in my
opinion, entirely unsuited for everyday use on the cooking platform.

I have used the hydrometer for testing pulp and catsup direct from the
kettle for seven years, and have had more success with this method than
with any other.

The hydrometer was never intended to be used with semi-solid substances
such as tomato pulp, but only with liquids such as brine, sugar syrup,
etc., in which there is no solid matter in suspension. With liquids, the
number of degrees registered on the hydrometer when it is immersed in
the liquid is equal to a definite specific gravity. This is not true
with semi-solids such as tomato pulp, as each packer must work out the
relation between the degrees of the hydrometer and the specific gravity
on pulp under the conditions which obtain in his plant. This is a very
simple thing to do, and once the packer has established this relation,
it will hold good as long as he is in the pulp packing business. The
reason why this relation is not the same for all packers is because
tomato juice is not screened to the same degrees of fineness in all
plants, and because all hydrometers having the same scale will not work
the same on pulp. This is because they have different shapes. The shapes
may only vary slightly, which will not interfere with their accuracy on
clear liquids, but it will make a difference when the hydrometer is used
in tomato pulp. Furthermore, some of the hydrometers will probably have
too much variation in their diameter at different points, which is a
disadvantage when they are used in tomato pulp. I have therefore always
had the hydrometers which I have used for this test made to order and to
conform to certain specifications which I laid down.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 3. Special hydrometer for testing tomato pulp and catsup.

  (C. J. Tagliabue Mfg. Co.)
]

In Fig. 3 is illustrated a hydrometer which is manufactured by the C. J.
Tagliabue Mfg. Co. of Brooklyn, and which is made to conform to these
specifications, which are: first, perfect balance; second, a minimum
amount of variation in the diameter of the various parts of the spindle
with the slope very gradual; third, a Beaume scale reading from 0 to 50
degrees; fourth, that it can be obtained in exact duplicate in any
quantity.

If the diameter at various points in the spindle is slight, with the
slope very gradual, it seems to be an advantage. It is, of course,
necessary that exact duplicates can be obtained to use when the first
one, on which your calculations are based, is broken.

In order to avoid disappointments which would be very apt to result from
the use of a hydrometer which was not particularly adapted to this test,
and which would very likely be difficult of exact duplication, the type
illustrated above should be adhered to, and it will be found to give
good results when used as directed in this chapter.

Two pulps of the same specific gravity, and of practically the same
degree of fineness, if tested hot, will register the same on the same
hydrometer, or on two hydrometers which are exactly alike in every
respect. (The hydrometer does not work well on cold pulp unless the pulp
is thin.)

Two pulps of the same specific gravity, showing a very marked difference
in their degree of fineness, will not register the same on the same
hydrometer, because, even though a definite volume of each will weigh
the same, the two pulps are of different thicknesses, which will have an
effect on the degree to which the hydrometer will sink when placed in
the pulp. However, if a packer cyclones his tomatoes before condensing
them, and uses the same mesh of wire screen in his cyclone all the time,
his pulp will all be of the same degree of fineness, and this point is
eliminated. Every pulp packer who cyclones his tomatoes, and who uses
the same mesh of screen in his cyclone throughout the season, can use
the hydrometer for testing his pulp and can obtain uniformity without
the use of any complex apparatus.

The relation between the hydrometer reading and the desired specific
gravity is arrived at as follows:

When the boiling pulp approaches the finishing point, pour a sample into
a tall gallon measure and take the hydrometer reading immediately. Save
this sample, put it through the finishing machine along with several
additional gallons dipped from the kettle so as to get a good sized
sample through the finisher, taking care that the brushes are dry so as
not to dilute the sample, and have the specific gravity determined on
this finished sample when it gets cold. Take other samples from the
kettle at five-minute intervals, and save them for the same purpose,
after getting the hydrometer reading. We will say that one of these
samples, when tested for specific gravity, ran 1.035. The packer looks
up the hydrometer reading he got on this sample, when taken hot from the
kettle, and finds the reading was 18 degrees. He then knows that for
pulp of the degree of fineness he gets from his cyclone, 18 degrees on
his hydrometer equals specific gravity 1.035 after finishing. He may
also find that for the sample that was taken from the kettle five
minutes later, specific gravity 1.04 is equivalent to 24 degrees under
the same conditions. He now has established a relation between the
degrees on his hydrometer and the actual specific gravity. (The reason
for putting the pulp through a finisher before determining the specific
gravity is that he wants to make this test under the same conditions
that the buyer would make it.)

Now, if the packer decides that he wants to condense his season’s run of
pulp to 1.035, he simply cooks it all to 18 degrees on his hydrometer,
providing this is the comparison he got. Under his conditions he may
find that 16 or 20 degrees equals specific gravity 1.035. As stated
before, each packer must determine this for himself.


                       Method of Using Hydrometer

The cook should fill a tall gallon measure with the boiling pulp and
allow the spindle to sink into it slowly. Do not drop it into the pulp
so that it will fall suddenly, as the weight of the mercury or shot in
the bottom will carry it farther than it should go. It will be noticed
that the spindle will sink rapidly for a few seconds and then almost
come to a standstill. At this point—when a standstill is almost
reached—the reading should be taken. It requires quite a little time to
reach an absolute standstill, and this is not necessary, as it is easy,
with a little practice, to catch the other point and take the reading.
After the reading is taken, lift out the spindle, stir the pulp with it,
and allow it to sink again as a check determination, merely for the
satisfaction of being doubly sure. You will find that you get the same
reading unless you wait so long before making the check determination
that the sample has had a chance to cool considerably. As the test only
takes ten seconds, the two tests can be made in a half minute at the
most, which gives the pulp no chance to cool.

The hydrometer method is not absolutely fool proof, but it is as near
fool proof as anything I know of. Neither is it the acme of perfection
in a pulp testing method, but it is, in my opinion, far better than
anything that has been suggested to date. It is simple, and accurate
enough for all practical purposes, and any ordinary laborer can be shown
in a few minutes how to make the test, and the chances of error are very
small indeed.

This method will not work where crushed tomatoes are being condensed. It
is necessary that the tomato juice be previously cycloned. The pulp must
be homogeneous and not lumpy and full of skins to be capable of being
tested by the direct hydrometer method. When determining the finishing
point on crushed tomatoes it is best to use either the eye or the
specific gravity test by weighing.


                         Finishing the Cooking

The steam should be kept on the kettle continuously until the batch is
done. While testing is being done it is not necessary to shut off the
steam. If salt is used it should be scattered over the batch slowly a
few minutes before it is done. Salt increases the specific gravity, and
also the hydrometer reading. The relation between the hydrometer reading
and the specific gravity can be worked out just as well where salt is
used as when it is not used.

The addition of salt does add to the flavor, and some buyers prefer it,
while others do not. I have seen buyers pick out a poor quality pulp
with salt in it in preference to a much better quality with no salt.

As soon as the steam valve is closed the exhaust should be opened to
discharge the steam from the coil or jacket and allow it to cool as
quickly as possible.

It is often necessary to hold batches in the cooking kettles for some
time after the cooking is finished. This darkens the pulp some, both
because of contact with the air, while hot, and from long contact with
the sides of the kettle or coil, which remain hot. Cooked pulp should
therefore be discharged from the kettle just as soon as possible. If
held over 30 minutes in the kettle it should be given a momentary boil
before letting it down. Be careful to avoid contamination in the kettle
after the steam is shut off, such as cold dirty water dripping in from
rafters overhead, and leaks from pipes over the kettles through which
cold tomato juice is flowing. Such material will not become sterilized
merely by contact with the hot pulp, and may cause swells in the canned
product if there is very much of it.



                               CHAPTER V
CONVEYING THE CONDENSED, STRAINED, OR CRUSHED TOMATOES TO THE FINISHING
                       MACHINE AND FINISHING SAME


                         Conveying to Finisher

The fewer pipes and receiving tanks the condensed pulp passes through
before being filled in the cans, the better. All of this conveying and
finishing equipment offers possibilities of contamination, and allows
the cooked pulp to cool to some extent before it is filled. Eliminate as
much equipment as possible between the cooking kettle and the filler,
and have the pulp enter the cans at at least 170 degrees F., and if
possible, at 180 degrees or above. A receiving tank between the cooking
kettles and the filler should be dispensed with if possible, and the
finishing machine draw the cooked pulp direct from the kettle by means
of a short line of enamel lined pipe.


                            Receiving Tanks

Unfortunately the arrangement of many plants is such that it is almost
necessary to use a receiving tank; at least in such cases it would be a
disadvantage not to have one. Where a tank must be used here it should
be in such a position that it is easily accessible, so that it will not
be necessary for a man to be an acrobat to get into it, inspect it, and
see that it is kept clean, and that an inch of pulp is not allowed to
lie in it and get cold while waiting for another batch to come down.

The best kind of a tank for this purpose is an enamel or glass-lined
tank with a rounded, tapering bottom so that it will almost drain itself
completely, and what little adheres to the sides can be scraped down in
a few seconds if it is necessary to wait five or ten minutes for a
fresh, hot batch to come down. Even if it isn’t scraped at all it will
probably not cause any trouble in a tank like this. Wooden tanks will
do, of course, but it would pay a packer who must use a tank here to
throw out his wooden one and put in a tank such as is recommended above.
It is hard to construct a wooden tank so that it will drain well; in
fact, nine out of ten scarcely drain themselves at all; they are never
kept as clean as they should be, and wet wood seems to be a favorite
spot for molds to grow, so that frequent scrubbing is necessary if it is
kept sanitary. It is most important to inspect the receiving tank
carefully before it is first used in the morning, as they sometimes mold
slightly over night, or dirt falls into them from overhead. A steam hose
should be kept close to a wooden tank to sterilize it at night after it
is scrubbed out.


                               Finishing

Whether or not a receiving tank is used, the finishing machine should be
as close to the cooking kettles as possible, and should receive constant
attention from a careful operator who can comprehend to some degree the
importance of keeping it clean. If the filling department gets ahead of
the cooking department and is obliged to wait fifteen minutes or a half
hour for a fresh batch of pulp to come down, the man who tends to the
finisher should take it apart at once, wash it off, steam it off
thoroughly with the steam hose, and put it together again so that it
will be clean and practically sterile when it receives the next batch.
Otherwise the screen and the brushes will be clogged up with cold pulp
when the fresh batch comes down, which is a bad condition, especially if
the pulp is not to be sterilized after it is filled, which is usually
the case with 5–gal. pulp. Even though the finisher is operated
continuously through the day, it should be taken apart and cleaned at
least twice during the morning and twice during the afternoon.

The finishing machine should be operated slowly, so that the pumice will
come out dry. The small receiving box under the finisher should drain
completely so that it does not have a foot of cold pulp lying in it when
the finisher is idle.


                       Screen Metal for Finisher

The best kind of screen for the finisher is made of monel metal. The
brass screen is more common; however, the same thing can be had in monel
metal, and it does not offer the opportunity for metallic contamination
that the brass screen does. The monel metal screens wear very well and
have proven themselves to be satisfactory in every respect. Aluminum
should not be used, as it is eaten up by the tomato acid and will not
last long.


                   Effect of Finishing on Mold Count

The opinion has often been expressed that the brushing of the pulp
through the fine meshes of the screen breaks up the small clumps of mold
and scatters them in small threads throughout the mass, thus increasing
the mold count, since this count is not based on the total quantity of
mold present, but upon the number of microscopic fields containing
molds. Thus, by scattering the mold, instead of allowing it to be
retained in comparatively large clumps, the number of microscopic fields
containing mold threads would be increased.

Although one might reasonably expect this to take place, experiments
have proven that it does not take place. Several years ago, in order to
determine this point, I analyzed thirty batches of catsup just before
entering the finisher and again just after coming through the finisher.
In every case the percentage of microscopic fields containing molds
after finishing was practically the same as before finishing. A
cone-shaped finisher with three revolving brushes and fine mesh screen
was used for this test.


                        Finishing Before Cooking

Although the finishing machine, if properly tended to, is probably
responsible for very little of the spoilage in pulp, it has been
suggested to use the finisher before the pulp is condensed. Then the
pulp can be drawn direct from the kettle to the cans, and the chance of
contamination and cooling in the finisher can be eliminated. This idea
is well worth experimenting with, as the pulp could be filled at almost
the boiling point. I have not tried out this idea, but offer it here as
a possibility which has advantages which are well worth looking into.
Packers who are having spoilage trouble which they cannot attribute to
other causes would do well to experiment with it. As to whether both the
pulp machine and finisher would have to be used before the cooking, or
whether the finisher alone would do, providing the tomatoes were
previously crushed, or cooked in a “breaking tank,” would have to be
determined by experiment. The method may be in use now by some packers;
however, I have not heard of it being used.



                               CHAPTER VI
        FILLING THE FINISHED PULP AND STORING THE CANNED PRODUCT


                    Filling Devices for Five Gallons

The most commonly used containers for pulp are the five-gallon can, the
No. 10 and the No. 1 can.

The usual method of filling 5–gal. cans is to draw the pulp from the
finishing machine by means of a large, heavy wall, single line hose
filling one can at a time. Some packers use a manifold by which five
cans can be filled at once. This requires a lot of valves and enamel
lined pipe fittings, and unless the operator is very expert the manifold
will not do the work any faster than a single line hose.


                        Square Can and Round Can

The square 5–gal. can is preferred by nearly all packers to the round
can. The round can is hard to handle, hard to stack, and is very
wasteful of space wherever it is stacked. The square can is to be
preferred in every way.


                           Testing for Leaks

When new cans are being used it shouldn’t be taken for granted that they
are absolutely free from leaks, as it is sometimes found that a large
percentage of a car of cans will run bad, and the packer should test
representative samples from the car as soon as it is received, so that
he can reject it and secure other cans if the car doesn’t test up right.
The best way to do this testing is with a small tank of water, a
one-eighth inch air line, giving about four pounds pressure, and a can
tester. A simple kind of can tester can be easily constructed in any
blacksmith shop, and merely consists of an iron brace to fit around the
can and which can be quickly tightened over the can and released, and a
soft rubber semi-circle to fit tightly into the cap hole and which is
gripped at the top and held in place by one side of the brace. The
one-eighth inch brass air pipe passes through the center of the rubber
semi-circle and into the can. As soon as the can is tightly clamped and
the cap hole sealed by the rubber, the air is turned on and the can is
immersed in the water. The leaks show up very quickly under a four-pound
pressure, and a dozen cans can be tested in as many minutes.


                          Washing and Steaming

New cans, as well as old ones, should be thoroughly washed and steamed
before filling. There is often a fine, light colored dust in new cans
which a good strong spray of water properly directed into the inverted
cans will remove. Through the same pipe which directs the spray of water
into the cans, the cans can be steamed by means of a simple arrangement
of valves on the steam and water pipes. A washing and steaming rack can
easily be fitted up which will wash and steam a half dozen cans at once.
A single stream of water entering the cap hole of the inverted can is
not sufficient to clean it. The pipe which enters the cap hole should be
capped, and about three holes drilled into this cap at a slight slant so
that the upward spray of water will strike three different spots in the
bottom of the inverted can, and make the washing thorough.

If the average packer could see just how little of the inside surface of
his 5–gal. cans is actually washed, he would be surprised. About fifteen
seconds is sufficient time to spray the inside of the cans, and then the
water valve can be closed and the steam valve turned on. The steam
should be kept on for a full minute and kept on strong. The idea is not
merely to heat the can but to sterilize it, at least to some degree,
before the pulp is admitted. The average employee steaming 5–gal. cans
leaves the steam on ten seconds at the most, and often not more than
three seconds. Such a short steaming does very little good. The space of
time between the steaming and filling should be just as short as
possible. The employees should not be permitted to keep a half dozen
cans steamed ahead all the time so that they are cold by the time the
pulp enters them.


                          Filling and Capping

As stated in the previous chapter, the temperature of the pulp when it
is filled should be at least 170 degrees F. and preferably above 180
degrees. The cans should be filled clear to the top with the pipe or
hose which conducts the hot pulp from the finisher; they should not be
topped off out of a dipper which contains luke warm pulp and is used for
topping purposes. It is not necessary to do this topping and the
practice should not be permitted. The sponges which are used for wiping
the edges of the cap hole should be kept in a bucket of clean, hot
water, and put back in the bucket after being used on a truckload of
cans. The capping and tipping job should undergo inspection before the
cans are trucked away.


                          Handling Filled Cans

Cans of filled pulp should be handled carefully. The cans should be set
down easily, so as to strain the seams as little as possible. Of course
the laborer wants to let go of cans of red-hot pulp just as quickly as
possible, but it is not necessary to drop them several inches, and the
employees should be taught to set the can on edge and then let its
weight straighten it up. If the employee is given good thick gloves it
is just as easy to handle the cans carefully. I had occasion at one time
to check up on the percentage of swells resulting from one pile of pulp
which was stacked by an old hand who knew how to handle pulp easily and
carefully, and another pile from the same day’s run which was stacked by
a gang of new and uninstructed help who simply picked the cans off the
truck and dropped them in place. These were second-hand cans, and the
difference was considerable.

Both filled cans and empty cans should be handled almost like eggs. One
large pulp packing concern is particularly cautious about this, and it
is certainly soothing to the nerves to see their employees handling
5–gal. cans after witnessing the rough and tumble methods in the average
plant. They know that it pays to be particular, and that they can get
three years’ use out of almost all of their 135–lb. plate cans, and not
have many swells either. This concern rarely sells any of their pulp,
but puts it up for their own use, to be made into bean sauce, catsup,
soup, etc., during the winter months.


                    Advantages of Separating Batches

Some packers stack their pulp away without dating it; others date each
day’s run; while others stack each batch separately. The latter system
is practicable where the pulp is cooked in large batches of about 300
gallons or more and in working up the pulp during the winter months it
is a great help. For instance, suppose part of the pulp is to be used
for catsup and part for bean sauce. The packer can take batches one to
fifty, for example, open one can from each batch, examine it for color
and microscopical analysis and he knows exactly what he has in that
stack of pulp, which may be three thousand cans. He can select the
various batches to be used for the purpose to which they are best
adapted, and he can be absolutely sure that each can in a batch is
exactly the same in every respect.

Take another example: We will say that the packer is selling his pulp.
His records show that on September 20th and on October 2nd, for
instance, he had a lot of bad tomatoes; shipments received on those days
were unavoidably held up and he had to make the best of the situation.
He knows, however, that on those same dates he had a lot of good
tomatoes which came in by wagon haul and that they were run up at the
same time. He has a large order for pulp from a catsup maker who is very
particular about the microscopical analysis of the goods he buys. In
order to play absolutely safe, the packer can take a sample from each
batch of the pulp run on September 20th and October 2nd, and if a half
dozen batches run too high he can omit them when he makes the shipment
to this buyer. If he preserved a sample from each batch run on these
dates at the time they were run, which is the better way, it makes the
sorting out of this pulp a very easy matter. He thus eliminates the
danger of the loss of a good buyer by sending him even a comparatively
small quantity of pulp which is high in micro-organisms.

It may seem to one who has never tried it that stacking each batch of
pulp separately would involve an awful lot of extra labor, and loss of
valuable space when stacking. As a matter of fact, it involves no extra
labor at all and no extra space. I have had a season’s pack of pulp
amounting to 75,000 5–gal. cans at one plant and cooked in batches of
300 gallons each, stacked each batch separate and it was no trouble at
all. The inspector who examined the tipping and capping job, or the
tipper, if the inspecting was done by him, merely took a fine stiff
brush and a marking pot and marked the batch number on the cap of each
can. This only takes a half minute for a truck load. The date was not
marked on the can, as a record of the batch numbers run on each date
during the season was kept at the office. When the pulp was piled away
each batch was stacked together, and where one batch left off and
another one began a slip of wood was inserted between two of the cans.

On days when the tomatoes are running bad, or there is a scarcity of
help for the sorting belt, it is wise to preserve a sample from each
batch and have an analysis made of it for reference when the pulp is
shipped out. On days when a good grade of tomatoes are being run it is
hardly necessary to analyze every batch, but a sample of about every
third batch can be taken.

Stacking each day’s run separate is, of course, better than no
separation at all. However, there are not many days when the entire run
will have a similar analysis; the best becomes inseparably mixed up with
the worst, and when the pulp is worked up the packer is working in the
dark. To stack a season’s run away without any system of separating
various divisions of it is the worst kind of folly, and is almost sure
to lead to trouble.


                              How to Stack

When the pulp is stacked away a space of at least an inch should be left
between each can to allow the air to circulate and prevent stack
burning. If this is not done, a pile of pulp may hold the heat for a
week or ten days, and the pulp, particularly that on the inside, will
become brown or even black, due to the long exposure to the heat. The
quicker the pulp can be cooled, the more the bright red color of the
tomato will be retained.

The height to which the pulp is stacked depends upon the heaviness of
the plate of which the can is made, and also, of course, upon the weight
the floor of the warehouse is able to stand. As a rule it is not wise to
pack 5–gal. cans of 107–lb. plate over four high, and not over five high
for cans of 135–lb. plate. Dry, sheltered storage should be provided for
pulp, and it will be found to pay in the end. Exposure to the elements
is very hard on the cans, and alternate freezing and thawing of the pulp
is a great strain on the seams of the can. A comparison of the leaks and
swells on pulp stored in shelter, and that stored in the open, will
convince the packer that it pays to construct dry storage space.

Narrow aisleways should be provided for between the stacked pulp so that
it can be frequently inspected for leaks and swells. By pulling out a
leaker in time, several other cans are prevented from becoming leakers,
as the leaking pulp from one can will run down on several others, and
the pulp, in connection with the oxygen of the air, will eat through the
tin plate, causing rust spots, and then pin holes. Frequent inspection
of the pulp pile and pulling out cans when they are just beginning to
leak or swell will save the packer a lot of money.

Cans should not be stacked on thin boards which will leave the surface
of the can close to the ground, as the moisture of the ground will
quickly rust the tin. It almost seems foolish to mention such a point,
but much pulp is stacked this way and the entire bottom layer when
turned up will be moldy and rusty on one side. The surface of the can
should be at least two inches from the ground. Lacquering will help
some, but will not prevent rusting if the cans are close to the ground.


                               Processing

Nothing has up to this point been said about the processing of 5–gal.
pulp. Very few packers process their pulp, and many unprocessed packs
have been put up that have not shown over 1 per cent of leaks and swells
where new cans were used and the various manufacturing processes were
carried out as they should be. In many cases a long shipment of such
pulp, after having been stored in a sheltered place for several months,
has produced very few additional swells.

One large packer of pulp has for years given his 5–gal. cans a 30–minute
process in boiling water, having them pass slowly through a boiling
water bath on a chain carrier, the speed of which is regulated so as to
give each can the required time in bath. The cans are placed on the
chain as soon as they are capped and tipped. Although this packer is
very careful in his manufacturing methods he processes as a matter of
insurance, principally because a great deal of his pulp is shipped long
distances. He must figure that it pays him or he wouldn’t keep it up, as
the processing involves quite a little extra handling and extra
equipment, and of course has a tendency to darken the pulp somewhat.

Thirty minutes at boiling temperature is, of course, not sufficient time
to bring the center of the can near the boiling point, but it will
sterilize the can itself and that portion of the pulp which is near the
outside. If the pulp is filled very hot, that portion of it which is in
the center of the can, being the last to cool, should practically
sterilize itself.


                              Life of Cans

Where a packer puts up pulp in 5–gal. cans for his own use during the
winter months he ought to be able to get two years’ use out of all of
his cans, and three years out of a large percentage of them. It is
questionable whether it is ever advisable to use a can over three
seasons. One reaches a point where the percentage of swells is so large
with old cans that the saving of the cans is unprofitable. When a new
can is first used, the year should be indelibly stamped on the can, so
that at any time the packer can go through his stock of used cans and
tell how many seasons’ use each can has had. This will prove a help in
making a decision on which cans are worth holding over for another
season, and which ones are not. It also gives him a line on the kind of
can that gives him the most value for his money.

Enamel lined cans are now being used a great deal, and as a rule they
seem to give a little better service than the plain tin, although this
is not always the case. Some packers think the enamel imparts a very
slight foreign taste to the pulp, but I have never been able to detect
it. Enameling or lacquering of the outside of the cans is essential if
there is not sufficient sheltered storage for the pulp, or if it must be
stacked in a damp warehouse. An excessive amount of moisture in the air
will quickly start the tin to rusting on plain cans, and many cannery
warerooms are entirely too moist for stacking cans, as they are near the
process room, and the air is often misty with the presence of condensing
steam from the process tanks. If there is ample dry storage space, the
outside enameling of the cans does not seem to be an advantage.


                        Washing and Drying Cans

When the season’s pack of pulp is being worked up, the cans which are to
be saved for another season’s use should be thoroughly washed out in a
tub with hot water. Spraying devices will not work, as the top of the
can will probably have a layer of pulp stuck to it, due to the receding
of the pulp in the can when it cooled, and even a heavy spray will not
remove all of this. The cans must be partially filled with hot water and
shaken hard to properly clean them. The foreman should inspect the
washed cans at frequent intervals by means of a small electric light
which is wired to a short rod and which can easily be inserted in the
can through the cap hole. If the washing is not thoroughly done this
will show it up quickly.

After as much of the water as possible is shaken out of the cans they
should be put in a drying oven and left over night. In the morning the
cans should be thoroughly dry if sufficient steam is kept in the oven
radiators. The oven is made with a partition which divides it into two
parts, and one part can be filled with the wet cans while the other side
is being emptied of the dry cans.


                          Protection From Dust

After the cans are dried, a pasteboard insert should be placed in the
cap holes to keep the dust out of them while they are in storage during
the winter and spring. One of the can companies at least, supplies these
pasteboard inserts or inverted caps with their cans, and they fit snugly
into the cap hole.


                           Testing Used Cans

Before the old cans are used the following year they should all be
tested for pin hole leaks and the leaks patched up. They should then be
re-tested and not used until they are shown to be tight under air
pressure when immersed in water. This can be done during the spring and
summer months, and the packer can then be reasonably sure that his old
cans are in good shape for the next season’s run. If the cans are very
old and the seams are very rusty, new pin holes will be opened up every
time air pressure is put in them. Such cans should, of course, be thrown
away.


                          Packing 10’s and 1’s

Pulp packed in No. 10 and No. 1 cans is usually filled with a rotary
filling machine, although No. 10’s are often filled from a single line
pipe and the filling can be done quite rapidly where the operator is
expert at the job. If it is necessary to top any of the cans, it should
be done from a small jacketed kettle which is connected up near the
filler, so that the pulp used for topping can be kept hot. The cans
should be put through a can washer and steamer before filling.

No. 1 pulp should have a much larger call from the consumer than it has,
and it could be made very popular if a high standard of quality was set
and maintained, and the advantage of its use advertised to the
housewife. Many consumers who have purchased the small size pulp or
puree for use in making tomato sauce, spaghetti, tomato soup, etc., have
been disappointed in the quality, and after one trial have gone back to
canned tomatoes for these purposes.

For No. 10’s a process in boiling water of 40 minutes in the old style
straight process tank is usually considered sufficient; this is to be
followed by a very gradual cooling in water so that the cans will not
buckle badly. For the No. 1 size a 20–minute process in boiling water is
sufficient. It is always well to cool the cans about ten minutes so they
will not retain the heat a great length of time. A better color and
flavor can be maintained if the goods are cooled in water after
processing. If a continuous agitating cooker is used for processing the
lengths of time given above can be cut down at least 60 per cent.


                          Packing Barrel Pulp

Barrel pulp is scarcely being packed any more, as the barrel has shown
itself to be unfit for pulp which is packed without preservative. The
use of barrels today is usually only resorted to in emergency cases when
cans for the purpose are not available. If the pulp is to undergo long
storage and shipment, or any great amount of handling, barrel goods will
usually show quite a big loss, not only because much of the pulp is
spoiled so that the spoilage is evident at once upon inspection, but
because of the growth of yeasts and bacteria in the pulp while it has
been in storage, and because of loss of color due to the action of air
seeping into the barrel. Wooden barrels as a rule are not absolutely air
tight, and it is hard to make them so.

I have packed pulp in good uncharred whisky barrels, using 5 lbs. of
salt to the barrel, and rolled the barrels to a sheltered place where
they would not be disturbed until they were ready to open, and after two
or three months’ storage the pulp was all right. If this pulp had been
moved, or held until a spell of warm weather came on, it is doubtful if
it would have shown up so well. The barrels should be washed out well
and steamed for about five minutes before being filled, and the bungs
should be burlapped.


                              Metal Drums

Ingot iron drums, such as are used for shipping oil, have been
recommended for tomato pulp and I have tried them, but they will not do,
as the tomato acid dissolves too much of the iron.


                 A Method of Preserving Pulp in Barrels

As a method of preserving pulp in barrels one packer for a number of
years put hydrochloric acid in it. This, being a strong acid, is also
quite a good preservative, and evidently kept the pulp in good shape.
When the pulp was worked up, enough bicarbonate of soda was added to
neutralize this acid, and the result of the neutralization was sodium
chloride, or common salt. There evidently could be no objection made to
this from a pure food standpoint, as none of the acid was left in the
pulp after the neutralization, and sodium chloride is a common
ingredient of pulp. However, the process darkened the pulp, which was an
objection. As to whether or not the flavor was impaired by this
treatment I do not know.



                              CHAPTER VII
 THE MICRO-ORGANISMS OF TOMATO PRODUCTS; THE ATTITUDE OF THE PURE FOOD
      AUTHORITIES TOWARD THEM; AND THE INTERPRETATION OF ANALYSES


                     Micro-Organisms; What They Are

By micro-organisms we mean molds, yeasts, bacteria, and their spores.
The term “micro-organisms” takes in all of these.

This chapter will deal with the subject in as short and concise a manner
as possible, with the object of giving the manufacturer a working
knowledge of it that will help him in his everyday factory routine.
Although volumes have been written about micro-organisms in food, it is
not necessary for the packer of tomato products to have an accurate,
detailed scientific knowledge of the subject in all its ramifications,
but a general understanding of it will suffice for practically all
purposes.

What are molds, yeasts, spores, and bacteria? Are they animals or
plants? Where do they grow, and under what conditions do they multiply
most rapidly? Are they harmful, or are the kinds found in tomatoes all
harmless varieties? If they are harmless, why does the government object
to them? Why is a product containing a certain number considered all
right, while when a larger number is present the product is said by the
government to consist in whole or in part of a filthy, decomposed,
putrid vegetable substance? Aren’t such foods as Roquefort cheese,
cottage cheese, buttermilk, and sauerkraut fairly swarming with the same
kinds of germs as tomato pulp? Aren’t these foods all considered
healthful? Then why object to these germs in tomato pulp? Aren’t the
germs all killed by the boiling, anyway? These are questions often asked
by pulp packers, and it is hoped that the following will throw some
light on the subject.

Molds, yeasts, spores, and bacteria are very tiny plants, not animals.
They are so small that they can only be seen by the naked eye when there
are very large masses of them together, consisting, in the case of
bacteria and yeasts, of hundreds of millions of small individual plants,
and in the case of molds, of many individual mold plants closely massed
together.

You have all seen large tufts of white mold on tomatoes, and black mold
covering a loaf of bread, but you probably did not realize the enormous
numbers of individual mold plants that were present, or the rapidity
with which they multiplied themselves. You have all seen swelled cans of
tomato pulp, and after the cans were opened you have noticed the bubbles
rising in the pulp, and have noted the very sour taste and often an
extremely disagreeable odor. In every thimbleful of that sour pulp there
were hundreds of millions of bacteria and yeast cells, so small in size
that many thousand could collect at the same time on the point of a pin
and they would not be noticed by the naked eye. It was these tiny
bacteria and yeast plants which caused the physical and chemical changes
in that pulp. Just as a parasitic vine winds itself around a tree and
sucks the life out of it, so these millions of bacteria and yeast plants
sucked all the goodness out of this tomato pulp, and left nothing but
sour, decomposed tomato fiber, acid, and foul-smelling gas.


                                 Molds

The structure of the mold plant is similar to that of a very small vine,
the branches of which are many and are closely massed together. The tiny
threads or filaments of mold resemble the vine and its branches. These
threads keep sending out new shoots which spread rapidly all over the
surface the mold is growing on, and the fruit of the mold plant, which
is called spores, is similar to the little berries which grow at the
ends of the branches of a vine. These berries are the fruit of the vine;
spores are the fruit of the mold plant. Just as the berries contain
seeds which reproduce the plant, so the tiny spores contain the seed
which will reproduce the mold plant. These spores grow at the end of the
mold threads or branches, and when ripe, either fall on the surface
directly beneath, or are carried away by a breath of air and move along
with the dust.

The spores of the mold plant will remain alive for months in a dry
state, floating in the air, or if the air be very still, falling to the
surface. The air everywhere is full of them, and as soon as they light
upon a moist surface, such as tomato juice, for example, which contains
nourishment for them, they begin to send out shoots of mold threads and
reproduce another mold plant.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 4.—Mold filament from catsup. (×150.)
]

Mold grows most rapidly upon a warm surface, preferably about the
temperature of the human body. It will not grow on a surface which is at
freezing temperature, or on a very hot surface. Under these extremes of
temperature it is unable to multiply itself. Boiling kills the mold
plant, and continued boiling of 15 minutes or more also kills the seeds
or spores of practically all species. That is one reason why it is
desirable to bring peeled tomatoes or tomato juice to a boil as soon as
possible—so that the mold and mold spores which are always on these
surfaces will be killed before they have an opportunity to grow.

There are many different species or varieties of mold plants which
thrive on tomatoes and tomato pulp, but they are all very similar; they
reproduce themselves in exactly the same way, and they are all arrested
in their growth by extremes of temperature, and are killed by continued
boiling. It should not be thought, however, that boiling for a very few
minutes will kill all mold spores, as they have a tough surface which
has considerable resistance to heat. I have seen 5–gal. pulp packed
which was only given a very short boil on account of low steam pressure,
and molds grew in the sealed cans after packing to such an extent that
the pulp all had to be thrown away. It is safe to assume, however, that
a 15–minute boil will kill mold spores and prevent the growth of molds
in the cans after they are sealed, providing, of course, that the pulp
is filled hot into cans which are clean and almost sterile.


                                Bacteria

Bacteria and yeasts are very much smaller plants than molds. While an
individual mold plant, growing as stated above like a very small vine,
branches out and spreads over considerable surface, bacteria (that is,
those forms in which the pulp packer is interested) are very short,
single rods, which, when multiplied in size 500 times by the microscope,
appear to be from 1/32 to ⅛ of an inch long. Yeasts, when multiplied in
size 500 times, usually appear to be from two to five times as large as
a pin head.

The rod-shaped bacteria referred to above are mainly the lactic acid,
and acetic acid bacteria, both of which produce fermentation in tomato
products. The lactic acid germ is the same one which causes milk to
sour, while the acetic acid germ is the one which produces the acetic
acid of vinegar. There are many other kinds of bacteria in tomato pulp,
many of which are small, round cells. However, the bulk of these
probably come from the soil and are natural to the tomato, and are not
counted when the number of bacteria per cubic centimeter are estimated.
The rod-shaped types indicate fermentation.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 5.—Rod-shaped bacteria from tomato pulp, common in bad catsups.
    (×500.)
]

Bacteria reproduce themselves with amazing rapidity. It has been found
out by watching them multiply under the microscope that under favorable
conditions one germ reproduces itself every 30 minutes, and in some
cases reproduction is known to have been even more rapid than that. The
method of reproduction is by simple division. The rod-shaped bacterium
is just like a match in shape, only many thousand times smaller, and in
the space of about 30 minutes it will divide itself in the middle, thus
changing itself into two shorter rods. Each of these rods grows in
length, and each of them then divides, making four rods. In 30 minutes
more the four rods change into eight, etc. It is the simplest method of
reproduction there is.

Bacteria also have another method of reproducing themselves which they
resort to when conditions become unfavorable for their growth and they
can no longer multiply themselves by the simple division method. Such an
unfavorable condition would be the drying up of the moist surface on
which they are growing. In this case the rod-shaped bacterium forms one
or more spores within itself. These bacteria spores are somewhat similar
to mold spores, but are much smaller. However, they are only produced by
bacteria under unfavorable conditions, while the mold plant produces
them under all conditions. The bacteria spores, like mold spores, have a
tough surface which gives them high resistance, and they contain the
germ of bacteria life which can reproduce the species when favorable
conditions for growth are again encountered. The bacteria spores,
therefore, float through the air as do the mold spores, remaining in the
dry state without nourishment for months at a time, and as soon as they
light upon a moist surface containing the elements for growth, even to a
very small degree, they reproduce the rod-shaped bacteria form, which
begins to multiply itself again by the simple division method.

Although most bacteria spores are killed by boiling for 10 or 15
minutes, there are a few species of extremely high resistance which have
been known to remain alive after several hours’ boiling. Spores of this
nature are infrequent, however, and the packer might as well forget that
they exist. Not one case of spoilage out of a hundred is caused by the
presence of such spores, and if all food products were cooked a length
of time sufficient to kill all bacteria spores which might possibly be
present, the foods would be cooked to death, and unfit to eat.


                                 Yeasts

Yeasts are very tiny individual cells, and multiply by budding, instead
of by simple division, as bacteria do. Instead of the yeast cell
dividing in half, thus producing two cells, it remains intact, but a bud
forms on its outer surface. This bud grows in size until it becomes
almost as large as the cell which produced it, and then it separates
from the mother cell, and we have two yeast cells. Each of these two
cells then produces buds, which again separate, and so on. Like
bacteria, the multiplication is very rapid under favorable conditions.
Favorable conditions for yeasts and bacteria are the same as they are
for mold, that is, a warm temperature, preferably near blood heat, and a
moist substance which is not too strongly acid, and which contains the
elements necessary for growth, preferably the natural sugar of fruits
and vegetables.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 6.—Yeasts and spherical bacteria from decaying tomatoes. (× 500.)
    [The oval bodies are the yeasts, some in budding stage; the bacteria
    appear as small spheres, or pairs of spheres.]
]

Yeasts are the principal gas-forming agents in the fermentation of pulp.
In the production of this gas they consume the natural sugar of the
tomato. They will multiply by the budding method described above as long
as they are in a medium which is favorable for their growth. As soon as
this medium drys up, or for some other reason becomes an unfavorable
medium for the multiplication of the yeast cells, the yeasts resort to
spore forming, just as bacteria do. These spores are formed within the
yeast cell, and when the cell wall breaks the spores pass off into the
air. Like all other spores, they have a high resistance, and will float
around in the dry state and remain alive for a very long time. When they
light upon a medium in which they can grow they reproduce the yeast
species, in the same manner in which the bacteria spore reproduces the
bacteria species from which it was derived.


                                 Spores

The spores, then, which are found in tomato products are of three
different kinds, namely, mold spores, yeast spores, and bacteria spores.
The greater number are almost always mold spores, since the mold plant
produces spores under all conditions, while yeasts and bacteria only
produce them under unfavorable conditions. When microscopical analyses
of tomato products are reported, the mold spores and yeast spores are
included with the yeasts in the term “Yeasts and Spores.” This is
because a large number of the spores are very similar to yeast cells in
appearance, and as it would be a laborious process for the analyst to
separate them, the yeasts and spores are included in one figure, which
greatly simplifies the analysis. The bacteria spores are not included in
the count of “Yeasts and Spores.”


                   How Germs Retard Their Own Growth

We will say that we have stacked away a 5–gal. can of pulp which
contains several living spores of bacteria, as is apt to be the case,
since the air is full of them, and the pulp is constantly open to
contamination from the air after it is cooked; also the spores may be in
the empty cans at the time they are filled. Why is it, since these few
spores are alive, and in a favorable medium for their growth, that the
rod-shaped bacteria forms which they produce do not multiply to such an
extent that they will ferment the can of pulp. It was stated above that
bacteria do not multiply in a strongly acid medium. Since the bacteria
produce acid as a by-product of their own growth, they surround
themselves with an acid medium, and they thus retard and finally stop
their growth by the product of their own reproduction. When this acid
medium reaches a certain strength the bacteria can no longer multiply,
and if that can is not moved until used, the chances are it will be all
right when opened. But if the can is moved, the contents are agitated,
and these living bacteria are shaken away from the acid medium in which
they have been suspended, and they are shaken into a fresh, sweet medium
in which they can again begin to multiply. It may therefore follow that
if this can is moved several times it would be at least partly fermented
when opened, while if it was left alone it would have remained sweet.
This illustration shows the desirability of moving pulp as little as
possible, and as carefully as possible when moving becomes imperative.
The lack of air in the can will, of course, also retard bacterial
growth, but there is usually a small amount of air in the can, and many
species of bacteria do not need any air whatever for their growth.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 7.—Mold spores and filaments. A type frequently found in decaying
    tomatoes. (×300.)
]


                           Rapidity of Growth

Yeasts and bacteria multiply more rapidly than do the molds, and that is
why pulp which is made from tomatoes or tomato peelings which are
handled slowly or carelessly usually shows a high content of yeasts and
bacteria, while the molds may be low. As a rule, most of the mold found
in pulp was present in the original tomatoes, and is found in the pulp
because it wasn’t eliminated in the sorting. But, as a rule, tomatoes
are not full of yeasts and bacteria unless they are very soft and mushy,
and it is evident on looking at them that they have fermented to some
extent. If pulp contains a high count of yeasts or bacteria it usually
means that this fermentation took place in the factory at some stage in
the manufacturing process, or that the product has been contaminated by
fermented tomato substance lodged in pipes, troughs, and conveying
equipment. Often it is due to delay in getting the tomato stock to a
boil. The laxness in this regard in some factories is surprising, and
their pulp is almost always high in yeasts and bacteria.

When you consider the extreme rapidity with which these germs multiply,
the folly of allowing tomato peelings or tomato juice to be very slowly
conveyed to a large tank for an hour or more before the steam is turned
on becomes apparent. Much has been written about the rapidity of
bacterial reproduction, and yet extreme delay in working up tomato stock
continues in many plants, and we frequently see bacteria counts of a
hundred million or more per cubic centimeter, all of which could be
easily avoided if the packer would just make up his mind to get to the
bottom of the cause and apply the simple remedy.

Just as an illustration we will say that we are putting up trimming
pulp, and the tomato receipts are rather light and the peelers are
working slowly, or that there aren’t many peelers working. The trimmings
are passed along on a belt conveyor where they go to a bucket carrier
and are lifted to a large cypress tank with a coil. They drop into the
tank slowly, and it may take two hours for the coil to be covered so
that the steam can be turned on; or after a foot or two of the trimmings
have been put in the tank it is lunch time, and it is an hour before the
filling of the tank continues. This may make it three hours before these
peelings are brought to a boil. Suppose at the time those peelings go
into the tank they contain enough bacteria so that if they were cooked
at once, the pulp would run 10 million to the cubic centimeter. This is
very probable. However, they are not cooked at once and at the end of 30
minutes you have peelings which, when condensed and cycloned, would show
close to 20 million bacteria. In an hour the first peelings which
entered that tank would yield 40 million, and in 1½ hrs., 80 million.
This is on the basis of the bacteria reproducing themselves every 30
minutes. Even if they multiply much more slowly than that you can see
that in the course of a little over an hour you are getting into
dangerous ground, and in the course of two or three hours the bacteria
have multiplied to such an extent that the product would almost be sure
to be condemned if it was picked up by an inspector. If the tomatoes had
quite a few soft spots in them when they were peeled it is very likely
that the peelings would yield 20 million bacteria if worked up
immediately, and then if delay of an hour or more comes on top of that
you can see where you will be on the bacteria count. The yeasts are also
probably multiplying at the same time, and the molds are growing to some
extent.

Now what this packer should do is to put a small open steam jet in the
bottom of his cypress tank, with four pipes running horizontally, as in
a “breaking tank,” and turn on the steam as soon as the peelings cover
these pipes, which lie right on the bottom of the tank. The peelings are
thus kept at a boil until the steam can be turned on the coil, and then
the steam from the open jet can be shut off. This is a very simple
arrangement to make and will save no end of trouble.

It must not be thought that because micro-organisms multiply most
rapidly in a warm medium they will not multiply in a cold medium, or one
which is considerably warmer than blood heat—the degree of temperature
most favored. The only safe extremes are 33 degrees F. for the lower
extreme, and 150 degrees F. or above for the higher extreme. Anywhere
between these two extremes of temperature there is danger of germ
activity, and the nearer the medium is to 98 degrees F., the more rapid
is the multiplication of the germs.

As tomato juice contains all the nutritive requirements for the growth
of micro-organisms, and is not strongly acid, it is an ideal medium for
them to grow in. There doesn’t seem to be any medium whatever that
molds, yeasts, and bacteria prefer to tomatoes and tomato juice.


               The Government Attitude on Micro-Organisms

What are the objections of the pure food authorities to the presence of
large numbers of micro-organisms in tomato products, and how do they
substantiate their objections? We know that all of these germs that grow
in tomato products are harmless. Even if an occasional harmful germ
should enter it would not be discovered by the method of analysis
employed, and unless it was in the spore form and of extremely high
resistance it would be killed by the boiling.

We know that buttermilk and sauerkraut are full of bacteria, and that
the latter is also full of yeasts, and that these two foods are
recommended by physicians as being particularly healthful because of the
lactic acid they contain, which is produced by the lactic acid
bacteria—the same kind that are condemned in tomato products.

In sauerkraut we know that these lactic acid bacteria and yeasts are
killed by the cooking, just as they are in tomato products, which seems
to make the two cases analogous. In buttermilk and cottage cheese,
however, they are alive and growing, and these products are considered
healthful. Roquefort cheese is full of a green mold which gives it its
characteristic flavor and color, and it is considered healthful. Then
why object to molds in tomato products?

The difference is that in one case we have a controlled and regulated
fermentation, which is confined to one or more species, which in
combination with the characteristic elements of that particular food
produce a healthful by-product or desirable flavor. In the other case we
have an unregulated and uncontrolled fermentation, produced by a variety
of species of micro-organisms. In tomatoes we have a number of species
of molds; we have a great many different species of wild yeasts, many of
which produce by-products of a disagreeable character; and we have a
number of species of bacteria, chief among which are the lactic acid and
acetic acid types, which change the tomato pulp from a sweet product, as
it should be, to a sour one.

The objections of the government are therefore more confined to the
by-products which are produced by the growth of these germs than to the
germs themselves. It is the contention that the by-products produced in
tomato products by many of these germs are such as to be classed as a
filthy, putrid, decomposed vegetable substance. Just how many of these
germs a product may contain before it is sufficiently decomposed to be
classed as filthy and putrid is a question. The government tries to play
safe in the matter, and give the packer a fair deal. When they condemn a
tomato product as unfit for food it isn’t because it contains only an
average quantity of micro-organisms, but because the number of germs
present, and the decomposition produced, is such as to indicate extreme
laxness in sanitation and lack of care in the manufacturing processes,
or the admittance of quite a large percentage of rotten material. The
spoilage may be either primary or secondary, that is, it may be due to
the use of a lot of partly rotten, moldy tomatoes at the start, which
were not carefully sorted, or it may be due to fermentation which takes
place in the factory, caused by extreme delay or by unsanitary
equipment. In primary spoilage the mold is usually very high and the
yeasts and bacteria may be low, while in secondary spoilage either the
yeasts or bacteria, or both, will be high, and the molds may be low.
This will be explained further later in this chapter.


                         Government Regulations

When the government regulations on tomato products were first published
it was stated that for catsup the microscopical counts should not run
above the following:

            Molds in 25% of the microscopic fields.
            Yeasts and spores—25 in 1/60th cubic millimeter.
            Bacteria—25 million per cubic centimeter.

It was also stated that pulp which was to be converted into catsup
should not contain more than half this number of micro-organisms, as
allowance must be made for the increase due to concentration.

The fact that pulp and catsup can be made to keep within these limits
has been demonstrated a number of times, but I have yet to see a
season’s run, all of which, or even 50% of which, will come within these
limits. It is easy enough to run individual batches which by careful
supervision over the sorters will have a very low count of molds, etc.,
but regardless of the precautions a man will take to safeguard himself,
there is almost bound to be at some time in the season some manufactured
goods that will run over these limits. The packer, however, should keep
these limits in mind as an ideal to work to, not on one batch, but on a
season’s run, but it is not an easy goal to attain, and in my opinion
the government doesn’t expect it to be attained very often. The packer
has to contend with a glut of tomatoes in September almost every year;
it is difficult to get good help to do the sorting and to supervise the
sorting; unfavorable weather conditions make the tomatoes moldy and full
of rot; delayed shipments come in in very bad condition; machinery
breaks down at the most unexpected times, and necessitates delay in the
factory at critical moments; the help get careless about the cleanliness
of the equipment, and run through some goods before the unclean parts
are discovered; accidents occur in the power plant and the plant may
have to run on inadequate steam for two or three days, etc., etc. Every
packer has been up against these things, but as a rule pure food
inspectors have not, and they are sometimes slow to appreciate the
packers’ side of the case. This is particularly true of local health
inspectors who have had no experience with food manufacturing problems,
and sometimes permit a packer to receive a lot of unfavorable and unjust
newspaper publicity.

The heads of the government pure food departments, that is, the high
officials of the Bureau of Chemistry, intend to play very fair with
canners, and it must be admitted that they will go a long way with a man
who is making an honest and determined effort to pack his goods in the
right way, and who is taking advantage of the opportunities he has to
post himself on modern methods of packing his products. The packer
should remember that the product of a plant that is run in an unsanitary
way is always under suspicion by the government, and that shipments from
these plants are the ones which are apt to be watched by the government
agents. The government can go into any railroad office, whether
government or privately controlled, ask the agent to show them the bills
of lading on shipments, and notify their inspector at destination to
take samples of the car on arrival.

Getting back to the subject of established limits for micro-organisms,
in the fall of 1916 the government authorities named the point at which
they were recommending condemnation proceedings. The notice, which was
issued by the Bureau of Chemistry of the Department of Agriculture,
stated that at the present time they were not advising condemnation of
tomato products unless the micro-organisms exceeded at least one of the
following counts:

           Molds in 66% of the microscopic fields.
           Yeasts and Spores—125 in 1/60th cubic millimeter.
           Bacteria—100 million per cubic centimeter.

This is a long way from the limit of 25 on each count, which the
government formerly stated should not in their opinion be exceeded. At
the same time, however, Mr. Howard of the Bureau of Chemistry made a
statement to the effect that they still considered it possible under
manufacturing conditions to make these products to comply with the
original 25–25–25 limit, and that it was their intention to approach the
original limits more closely. It should not be understood that the
government thinks that products which run below the higher limits are
good enough, because they decidedly do not, but at present they are not
recommending for condemnation those products which run below these
figures.


                          State Food Officials

What about the state pure food boards? Do they follow the government
lead in this matter or act according to their own ideas? Some follow the
government and some do not. Some state officials are quite lenient while
others are very strict. A product which one would pass as being all
right, another would condemn. I have seen state officials condemn catsup
which I am quite sure the government would pass, although it wasn’t as
good as it should have been. If the manufacturer had cared to carry it
to the courts there would have been an even chance of him winning out.
However, the loss of prestige due to the publicity of such action is
often greater than the loss of the manufactured goods would be and as a
rule the manufacturer does not contest the case. Publicity is a powerful
whip in the hands of the government and state officials.


                         Checking Up Daily Runs

What is the manufacturer to do about checking up his daily runs of pulp
and catsup during the season? Is it better for him to send his samples
to a commercial laboratory, or to employ an analyst to work at his
factory, or to do the best he can in the sorting and in the factory
routine, assuming that if he uses proper care here his products are sure
to analyze all right and he doesn’t need to worry.

This problem has been discussed a great deal. To employ an analyst on
the place is usually rather expensive for a small packer if the man is
fully competent to do the work, and unless he is, he is worse than
useless. To send samples to an outside laboratory often involves
considerable delay in getting the reports, and by the time the results
are known the goods are stacked away and almost forgotten. If they ran
high in micro-organisms there was some cause for it, and that cause
should have been remedied at once, and probably would have been had the
analysis been reported within a day or two. Therein lies the chief
advantage of getting an analysis quickly. An analysis on products which
have been run a week previously is, of course, better than nothing, but
it is far from being satisfactory.

The third method, that is, relying upon care in the factory and having
no analysis made, was at one time recommended, but it is not now
considered good policy. In a great many cases where this policy was
adopted it was found out when it was too late that much of the goods
that was thought to be all right was decidedly off. There were
undiscovered errors in the manufacturing process, and they remained
undiscovered because there was no means of checking them up.

My advice in this matter is to have an analyst trained for this work and
employ him at your factory if you are so far from a reputable analyst
that it will take some little time to get a report. The Research
Laboratories of The National Canners Association at Washington is
undertaking the training of men in this analytical work for those
companies that desire it. If the packer is close enough to a reputable
analyst to get a report within a day or two he will find that such an
arrangement is usually satisfactory, and he should rush his samples with
all possible speed, and request the analyst to wire the report if the
analysis is high.

Then there is the problem of what laboratory to send samples to. Will
any reputable chemical or bacteriological laboratory do for this
purpose? Many packers have made a mistake right here, and the analyses
they have received have been worse than nothing because they were not
only grossly inaccurate but misleading. They have gone on thinking their
goods were all right and have found out later by some accident that they
were all wrong.

Although an analyst may be a good microscopist and fully competent to do
general bacteriological or biological work, he cannot possibly get a
correct microscopical analysis on tomato products unless he is familiar
with the Howard method as used by Mr. Howard. This means that he must
use the exact technique that Mr. Howard uses in his laboratory. Every
manipulation, no matter how slight, must be made in precisely the same
manner that Mr. Howard makes it; otherwise the results are worthless. An
analyst, in order to be competent to use the method, must either work
with Mr. Howard until he can check him on all kinds of samples, or he
must work with one of the analysts that have been closely associated
with Mr. Howard in this work. If the analyst has had factory experience
and can assist the packer in running down the causes of high counts,
that is a great advantage.


                       How to Interpret Analyses

We will say that a sample of pulp taken from one of the daily runs has
been sent to an analyst, and the report on it is as follows:

            Molds in 70% of microscopic fields.
            Yeasts and Spores—10 in 1/60th cubic millimeter.
            Bacteria—12 million per cubic centimeter.

What does that analysis mean?

The first item means that the analyst examined through the microscope 50
views of a thin layer of the pulp on a slide, and that out of these 50
views, 35 of them contained sufficient mold to count them as positive
fields, so that molds were found to be present in 35 out of 50 fields,
or in 70% of them.

The second item means that from another prepared slide of this pulp
(which slide is so ruled that the volume of liquid on any given space of
it can be measured) there were found to be 10 yeasts and spores in
1/60th of a cubic millimeter. A cubic millimeter is about ⅕th of a drop,
and 1/60th of a cubic millimeter is therefore about 1/300th of a drop—an
exceedingly small quantity, almost inconceivable. The best way to
conceive it is to think of one drop of pulp mixed in 299 drops of water,
and a drop taken from this exceedingly dilute mixture. In this almost
inconceivably small amount of pulp there were 10 yeasts and spores.

The third item means that in the same slide in which the yeasts and
spores were counted there were found to be 12 million rod-shaped
bacteria in each cubic centimeter. A cubic centimeter is about 20 drops.

More important to the packer than the above, however, is the
interpretation of the analysis from the factory standpoint. What does it
indicate about the way the tomatoes were handled and worked up? The
molds are high and the yeasts and bacteria are low. It means that in all
probability the tomatoes were not properly sorted, but that they were
worked up rapidly enough after the sorting. It indicates primary
spoilage, but little or no secondary spoilage. If there had been
secondary spoilage, either the yeasts or bacteria or both would be high.
It is a tip for the packer to watch the sorting belt closely.

We will say that the report on another sample is as follows:

                Molds in 20% of the microscopic fields.
                Yeasts and Spores—70 in 1/60th C. M.
                Bacteria—110 million per C. C.

What is indicated by that analysis?

It shows that the tomatoes were probably sorted all right, and that the
primary spoilage is probably small, but that there is a very strong
indication of secondary spoilage, that is, spoilage which took place in
the factory. Unless the tomatoes were extremely soft and partially
fermented when they were run up, there was probably great delay at some
stage in the manufacturing process, or some of the equipment was in a
very unsanitary condition and the fresh goods became contaminated with
fermented tomato substance which was carried over with it a little at a
time.

Suppose the analysis ran as follows:

                Molds in 20% of the microscopic fields.
                Yeasts and Spores—25 in 1/60th C. M.
                Bacteria—110 million per C. C.

This also indicates secondary spoilage. The same conditions are
indicated in this analysis as in the preceding one. The only difference
is that instead of the fermentation being conducted by both yeasts and
bacteria, it was conducted by bacteria alone. In other cases the yeasts
and spores may run high and the bacteria low, indicating that the
fermentation was one of yeasts, and not bacteria. If all three of the
counts run high it indicates that either the tomatoes were very moldy
and soft to begin with and were improperly sorted, or that they were
both improperly sorted and that the pulped juice was improperly handled
in the factory. It is almost a sure indication of primary spoilage, and
points very strongly to secondary spoilage also.

There has been considerable criticism of the Howard method of analyzing
tomato products, and it cannot be denied that the method is far from
being ideal. It is the best method that we have, however, and the packer
can be sure of one thing, namely, that if his products are made right
they will never show a high test by this method. It is true that all
improperly made goods do not give a high test by this method, and that
is one objection to it. These cases, however, are infrequent. The method
of estimating all three counts has also been criticized as being unfair
and not in accordance with the best bacteriological practice. If
anything better was suggested the Bureau of Chemistry would no doubt be
glad to adopt it, but so far as I know, no improvement has been offered.



                                PART II
The Manufacture of Tomato Catsup, Chili Sauce, Trimming Pulp, and Tomato
                                  Soup



                              CHAPTER VIII
A DISCUSSION OF PRESERVATIVE AND NON-PRESERVATIVE CATSUPS, AND THE MOST
                     FREQUENT CAUSES OF INFERIORITY


                 Unfavorable Publicity on Preservatives

When the pure food movement first swept over this country the subject of
preservatives got very wide publicity, and the sensational press fed the
people up on the news that their food was being doctored with all sorts
of chemicals. Tomato catsup came in for its share of this publicity, and
the two preservatives most commonly used in catsup, namely, benzoate of
soda and salicylic acid, were classed among the chemicals that were
ruining our stomachs.

Although salicylic acid has been ruled out, benzoate of soda is still
being used to some extent. The great bulk of the catsup now being
manufactured, however, is made without preservative, because packers
realize that a good percentage of the public became prejudiced against
preservatives of all sorts during the pure food agitation, and a great
many are still prejudiced against even so mild and harmless a
preservative as benzoate of soda. There are those who still maintain
that this preservative is or may be harmful when used to the extent of
one-tenth of one per cent, which is the permissible amount according to
the federal law; however, the Remsen board appointed by President
Roosevelt to decide the benzoate question unanimously decided that when
benzoate of soda is used in condiments to the extent of one-tenth of one
per cent it is perfectly harmless. It was even found to be perfectly
harmless in much larger proportions.

These facts, however, have never reached the masses, most of whom never
heard of the Remsen board, and even if they had, a great many people
would still remain prejudiced. Most packers think, therefore, that it is
best to play safe and make their catsup without chemical preservative,
relying solely upon sterilization to keep their product from spoiling up
to the time the bottle is opened, and upon so called “natural”
preservatives to keep it from fermenting after the cork is drawn.


                        “Natural” Preservatives

That these “natural” preservatives, when present in large quantity, as
they sometimes are, may be more harmful to the stomach than a minute
quantity of benzoate of soda, is surely a reasonable supposition. I have
known of people getting sick directly after a meal by eating a good deal
of catsup of high acidity on a steak and drinking milk along with it. At
least the sickness was attributed to this combination, and it doesn’t
seem unreasonable. A high acetic acid acidity will keep catsup as well
or better than ⅒th of 1% of sodium benzoate will. There are catsups on
the market made “without preservative” that would probably never
ferment, even if exposed to the air for a year, because they contain so
much acetic acid. The raw acetic acid is, of course, not permitted to be
used, but a very strong distilled vinegar is used containing about 10%
of acetic acid.

The “natural” preservatives of catsup are the vinegar, sugar, salt, and
spices. The vinegar probably exerts 80% of the preserving property, the
sugar about 10% and the salt and spices together 10%. The sugar would
have much greater preserving properties if it was present in higher
concentration as in preserves or jelly. It is doubtful if the
preservative properties of sugar are very great when it is only present
to the extent of about 10 or 15%, and the product is of a liquid nature
like catsup.


                             Proper Acidity

The proper thing for a packer of non-preservative catsup to do is to
strike a happy medium on acidity; use enough vinegar to keep it under
almost any conditions, but not so much as to almost entirely mask the
tomato flavor and require sugar in such large quantity as to make the
final product resemble tomato preserves. A good total acidity is 1.25%,
figured as acetic acid. This figure includes both the acetic acidity of
the vinegar and the natural acidity of the tomato. If a catsup is
properly manufactured, this acidity should answer practically all
purposes. The catsup packer should not be expected to make catsup which
will keep in perfect condition in restaurants where absolutely no care
or intelligence is used in handling it. This class of restaurant
proprietor is fortunately in a decided minority, but rather than make a
catsup that will be so strongly acid that it will stand up under his
treatment, he should be educated to use a little care in the handling of
the catsup.

The following is a common abuse in restaurants. We will say, for
example, that three catsup bottles are on the tables containing from a
half inch to two inches of catsup. The waitress does not like to put a
bottle which is almost empty before a customer, so she pours the
contents of two of the three bottles into the other one. The catsup in
these bottles may be a week old. When the contents of the bottle
containing this mixture are almost gone she pours the rest of it into
another partly filled bottle and so on, so that some of the bottles may
contain catsup which is over a month old, and in a warm, poorly
ventilated restaurant it is apt to start fermenting. The proprietor
should be educated to the fact that when using a non-preservative catsup
he must not pour it from one bottle to another, but must leave it in the
original container until almost gone, and then use the balance for
making tomato sauce, spaghetti sauce, and for flavoring soups, gravies,
etc.

One advantage the packer using benzoate of soda has over the
non-preservative packer is that he can make his catsup so that it will
keep properly and at the same time maintain the natural tomato flavor to
a high degree. The tomato flavor is maintained because it is not largely
masked by the use of a lot of vinegar and sugar. The packer using
benzoate rarely uses more than a third as much vinegar or half as much
sugar as the non-preservative packer.

Many non-preservative catsup makers who read this will think a total
acidity of 1.25% is higher than necessary. They will say to themselves
that the acidity on their catsup never runs over 1%, and they have never
had any complaints. It may be that they do not have a very big
restaurant trade where so many of the fermentation complaints come from,
or that they do not have a very wide distribution of their product so
that it is subjected to all sorts of climatic conditions, or it may be
that they are having a case of fermentation now and then in households
but never hear about it. In that case the housewife usually merely drops
that brand and buys another one next time. But where a restaurant or
hotel is having fermentation trouble, the manufacturer is sure to hear
about it quick.

It is wise to allow a fair margin of safety, and my experience is that a
total acidity of 1.25% is not too high. Quite a few catsup packers
maintain an acidity between 1.50% and 1.75%, and one large concern has
for years kept the acidity of their catsup around 2%. This, however,
seems unnecessarily high. Acidity will be discussed further in the next
chapter.


                           Processing Catsups

Non-preservative catsups should either be processed after filling and
sealing, or the bottles should be sterilized before filling and the
catsup filled very hot without giving an after-sterilization. Catsups
made with the addition of benzoate of soda are not processed; however,
the fact that benzoate is used should not cause laxness at any stage in
the manufacturing process. It is a mistake for manufacturers to think
that ⅒th of 1% of benzoate of soda will keep their product in perfect
condition regardless of how careless they are in their manufacturing
processes.


                     Advantage of Benzoate Catsups

Some brands of benzoate catsup enjoy a very good sale, and are popular
with those who do not like a strongly acid and sugary catsup, but prefer
one which is mild and in which the predominating flavor is one of tomato
blended with mild spicing. A restaurant using a catsup or chili sauce of
this character will almost always use more of it than they will of a
strongly acid catsup which is highly spiced. If the catsup is mild, more
of it is usually used at a time.


                    Causes of Poor Color and Flavor

The chief objections to most of the catsups on the market are a lack of
bright red color, and a more or less scorched taste. This may be due to
a number of causes. The brownish color may be due to underripe tomatoes,
or to tomatoes which were picked during a spell of cold, dark weather.
It takes sunshine to give tomatoes a brilliant color, and when there is
an absence of sunshine for a week or ten days many of the tomatoes will
rot before they attain a bright red color. At such times during the
season it is impossible to get a brilliant color, but if the packer will
exercise as much control as he is able to over the picking, persuading
the farmers to hold their tomatoes back just as long as possible, he
will not have a great deal of such goods and he can get a fair color out
of what he does get, out of these dull colored tomatoes. He should be
careful not to mix brownish tinted catsup with the brilliant red goods.
If he will keep similar shades of catsup in the same shipment he is not
nearly as apt to have complaints as he will have if he mixes different
colors. It is even more important that all the bottles in one case
should be very nearly alike. A grocer who receives a case of catsup all
of which is very slightly off in color will usually not complain unless
it is decidedly off. If, however, off colored bottles are mixed in the
same case with bottles of a brilliant red color, the poor colored goods
suffer greatly by comparison, and then there is apt to be a complaint.

The other causes of poor colored catsup are scorching at some stage in
the manufacturing process and too much cooking. By too much cooking is
not only meant too long a cook at one time, but also too much cooking in
the aggregate. For example, a packer receives tomatoes of good color and
he cooks them into pulp, which requires a cook of thirty minutes. He
packs the pulp in No. 10 cans and sterilizes it about forty minutes, and
he has a good colored pulp, as it has only received two short cookings.
He stores this pulp for several months, and then makes it into catsup.
It is reheated, which is hard on the color, as heat applied to cold pulp
for five minutes to bring it to a boil seems to hurt the color as much
as a half hour added on to the cook after the pulp is hot. After
reheating, it is cooked into catsup, which requires about thirty
minutes, and after being bottled it is sterilized at a high temperature
for about an hour, which makes the fourth cooking those tomatoes get.
This is what is meant by too much cooking in the aggregate. Too long a
cook at one time will, of course, also darken the product.

Scorching is more frequent with catsup made from pulp than with that
made from fresh tomatoes. Much of the catsup made from pulp, although
not actually scorched, has a very faint scorched flavor to it.

It is hard indeed to make catsup from pulp which tastes like the goods
which is bottled from freshly run tomatoes. It falls behind in both
color and flavor. One finds that color and flavor are very closely
associated in catsup. A bright red catsup is practically always a fine
flavored product, while a dull colored catsup with a brownish cast to it
very frequently has a more or less unpleasant taste with the suggestion
of being somewhat scorched.


         Advantage of Direct Conversion of Tomatoes Into Catsup

Many catsup makers are doing away with winter packing almost altogether.
They bottle at least 90% of their catsup direct from fresh tomatoes.
Half of the remaining 10% is made from 50% fresh tomatoes and 50% pulp,
the pulp being added about ten minutes before the cooking is completed.
This fresh tomato and pulp mixture makes a much better flavored product
than one can expect to get from straight pulp. Pulp can always be used
in combination with fresh tomatoes at the beginning and at the close of
the season when the tomato receipts are light.

Catsup made direct from tomatoes is not only of superior quality, but it
can be manufactured at least 20c a dozen cheaper for the pint size than
catsup made from canned pulp. In many cases the difference will run more
than that. Packers who put up a general line of tomato products will do
well to reserve their fresh tomatoes for catsup, and to use their pulp
for bean sauce, spaghetti sauce, tomato soup, etc., all of which can be
made better from pulp than one can make catsup from pulp.


                               Thickness

The thickness of catsups found on the market is fairly uniform, and
there is rarely a cause for complaint on this score. When catsup is
packed in cans, the thicker it is the better the buyer likes it as a
rule; however with bottled goods excessive thickness is not a virtue but
a cause of much annoyance to the consumer. It is better to have it just
a shade too thin than too thick.


                         Spicing and Sweetness

Improper spicing of catsups is not a common fault either. Even where
essential oils are used exclusively for spicing, a real good flavor can
be had if the oils are properly administered. As to sweetness, many
catsup makers are coming to the conclusion that the public is demanding
a slightly sweeter catsup than was generally packed eight or ten years
ago. There is very little doubt but what a composite sample from a half
dozen prominent brands of today, if compared with a composite sample
taken from the same brands ten years ago, would show quite an increase
in sweetness. One of the largest selling brands on the market has a
distinct sweetish taste, and the public, at least a large percentage of
it, seems to like it. There are still many who like a tart or slightly
sour taste, but the tendency is unquestionably in the other direction.


                              “Black Neck”

A rather common defect in bottled catsup is what is commonly called
“black neck,” which is a darkened space in the neck of the bottle, all
the way from a half inch to over two inches in depth. Several years ago
I made a very thorough investigation of the causes of black necked
catsup, and every thing seems to point to the fact that in nine cases
out of ten it comes from leakage of air into the closure of the bottle.
The space between the surface of the catsup and the top of the bottle
should be a vacuum if the seal is perfect, as this space is left by the
contraction of the catsup in the bottle when it cools. Many closures, no
matter what style, do not seem to be entirely impervious to air, and the
catsup gradually darkens as the air is gradually admitted. A suggestion
for overcoming “black neck” will be given later under the head of
“stacking catsup.”


                         General Attractiveness

The general attractiveness of the package is, of course, important. A
cheap, unvarnished label which quickly becomes dirty looking, and a
cheap tin cap which gets black and filthy looking on the inside after
the catsup has been open a few days, do not enhance the sale of a
product, and only make a very slight reduction in the manufacturing
cost. The packer should by all means use either a re-tinned cap or an
inside enameled cap. Ordinary plain tin caps should be absolutely
barred, as they are entirely unfit for a bottled condiment which
contains as much acid as catsup.

Although the remarks in this chapter have been confined to catsup, it
should be understood that they apply equally to chili sauce, which only
differs from catsup in that it is made from peeled instead of strained
tomatoes, and is usually a little bit more spicy.



                               CHAPTER IX
 A DISCUSSION OF THE INGREDIENTS OF CATSUP; WHEN AND HOW THEY SHOULD BE
   ADDED; AND THE AMOUNTS OF EACH PER 100 GALLONS OF FINISHED CATSUP


Practically all of this chapter will be devoted to non-preservative
catsup. The use of benzoate of soda and the changes in the formula which
its use involves will be briefly discussed at the end of the chapter.


                  Measuring the Volume of Tomato Juice

When catsup is being manufactured direct from tomatoes the tomatoes
should be previously cycloned, either by the cold or hot process. I have
never cooked catsup direct from crushed tomatoes, as it is evident that
crushed stock is open to at least two objections. The first is that the
finishing point would be rather hard to gauge accurately, due to the
presence of so many peelings, and the second is that when the peelings
and seeds are screened out by the finishing machine they would no doubt
carry some of the ingredients with them, chiefly sugar, which would be a
waste.

If the tomato juice is delivered to the catsup cooking kettle from a
“breaking tank,” as it is in the hot pulping method, the volume of
tomatoes to be used per batch of catsup is measured on the “breaking
tank,” and the cycloned juice is delivered from this tank to the catsup
cooking kettle as the condensation gradually allows more and more of it
to be taken care of.

If the cold pulping process is used some other method of measuring the
tomatoes for each batch must be used. One way is to have the catsup
cooking kettle built high enough so that it can hold the entire volume
of cycloned juice required for the batch without boiling over when the
steam is turned on. The juice is then pumped over to a certain measure
on the kettle before the cooking is begun. This requires very high
cooking tanks. Another way is to take over as much juice as the kettle
will hold and concentrate it, and then shut off the steam and take over
another measured volume according to a gauge on the inside of the tank
which reaches from top to bottom, and is marked off in gallons. If this
method is used the cooking kettles need not be so high. Another way is
to use a meter on the pipe line between the cyclone and the cooking
kettles, which will register, within twenty-five gallons, the volume of
tomato juice being pumped over.

It is, of course, an advantage to start the cooking as soon as the coil
or jacket is covered, so as to kill growing micro-organisms as quickly
as possible, and it is also an advantage to keep the contents of the
kettle vigorously boiling from the time the coil or jacket is covered
with the fresh juice until the batch of catsup is finished.

None of the ingredients should be added until all of the tomato juice
for the batch is in the kettle, with the exception of the bag of spices.

It is usually not considered advisable to cook batches of catsup of over
300 gallons when finished. I have cooked as much as 400 gallons at a
time, but it requires quite a long cook to complete the condensation
unless the tank has a large surface for evaporation and a coil with a
very large cooking capacity, and a high steam pressure is available.


                           Amount of Tomatoes

In discussing the proper amounts of the various ingredients to use, a
batch of finished catsup of 100 gallons in volume, when measured hot,
will be taken as the basis throughout this chapter.

The amount of tomatoes required to make 100 gallons of finished catsup
varies according to the season of the year and the quality of the stock.
If the tomatoes are watery, or contain so much rot that 25% or more must
be cut away, that of course makes a big difference. If, on the other
hand, the tomatoes are large and meaty, and contain scarcely any rot, a
comparatively small amount of them are required. Taking tomatoes of
average size, containing an average amount of solid matter, and from
which 10% by weight of rotten material is sorted out, it is safe to
figure on 37 bushels of tomatoes or 59⅝th bushel baskets for 100 gallons
of finished catsup.


                        Keeping Batches Uniform

If the catsup batches are to be kept uniform in size throughout the
season, as they should be, the quantity of tomatoes per batch will have
to be changed slightly from time to time according to the amount of
water they contain. The only safe way is to put a gauge on each cooking
tank which marks the desired volume of catsup when cooked, and to vary
the volume of tomato juice per batch to the extent which is indicated by
the gauge. If the batches are running two inches low, the cook will know
by a little experimenting just how much extra juice will be required per
batch to make it right.

Having all the batches come out exactly the same in size is important,
both in preservative and non-preservative goods. In the former, the
percentage of preservative cannot, of course, be kept uniform unless the
batches are kept uniform in size. In non-preservative goods it is
advisable to keep the percentage of acetic acid—that ingredient upon
which the keeping quality chiefly depends—as nearly uniform as possible.
Of course, if a batch runs large, the acetic acid percentage will be
low, while if the batch runs small, the acetic acid percentage will be
higher than necessary. The spicing will also be more uniform if the
batches are uniform in size.


                        Use of Spices in a Sack

Where the spices are put in a sack, the sack is usually tied to the
coil, if this type of cooking tank is being used, and where a jacketed
kettle is used, there being no place to tie the sack, it is usually just
thrown on top of the boiling tomato juice and allowed to float around
near the surface during the boiling. One concern uses a long pole which
is suspended from overhead and reaches to within a foot of the bottom of
the jacketed kettle. The sack is tied to this pole, and it is thus held
down during the boiling. As to whether any flavor is actually lost by
allowing the spice bag to float near the surface is a question. This
could easily be determined by an analysis of the spice residue.


               Use of Spices Direct and When to Add Them

As far as I know, whole spices are always used when the spices are
placed in a sack, and when they are thrown into the catsup direct,
ground spice is used. It is claimed by some that the latter method gives
just as good results as the former, and that no advantage is to be
gained by the use of sacks. As to whether or not this is true I cannot
say, as I have never used ground spices in catsup with the exception of
pepper, ginger and paprika. The reason for using sacks, of course, is to
allow the flavor of the spice to be extracted without having the spices
come in direct contact with the catsup. If you will macerate some ground
allspice or cloves in dilute acetic acid for a while, you will notice
the black substance which is extracted, and it is surely reasonable to
suppose that at least some of this will be extracted in catsup when the
ground spices are thrown in direct. As for the cassia, there probably
would be no objection to the use of the spice direct.

The flavor of mace is lost by continued boiling, and the use of it in a
sack which stays in the boiling liquid for thirty minutes or longer is a
waste of the mace. If mace is boiled long in direct contact with the
catsup it imparts a very bitter taste. The proper way to add mace is to
throw it in direct in the broken form about three minutes before the
batch is done. Ginger should be added at the same time as mace, as its
volatile oil passes off very rapidly, and if cooked long it will
practically all be lost by volatilization. As to the pepper and paprika,
they are added direct in the ground form at the beginning of the
cooking. Mustard is also said to be used in catsup, but it apparently
isn’t used extensively.


                      Use of Spices in Two Batches

If the whole spices are placed in a sack it is a good idea to cook each
sack of spices in two batches. In this way more of the flavor is
extracted than would be taken out by one boiling. This can be proven by
cooking a batch of catsup with no spice other than a sack of spices
which has been previously cooked in a batch of catsup. Note the flavor
which is extracted by the second cooking, and you will see where you are
losing valuable material when you throw away a bag of spice residue
after one cooking. Of course the cook will then have two sacks of spices
in each batch—a new one and an old one, and he must mark them in some
way so he can tell which is which when the batch is drawn off. A good
way is to tie the new sack with a single knot, and the old one with a
double knot. This method seems to be less confusing to the cook than any
other.

It is also important to tie the spices in the sack loosely. If a cook is
not instructed about this he will invariably tie a cord around the sack
so close to the spices that there is no room for them to move around
while the sack is being agitated by the boiling. Undoubtedly a better
extraction can be obtained if the spices have freedom of movement in the
sacks.


                           What Is Extracted

What we really get from the spices is a water extract. The acetic acid
of the vinegar probably extracts a little more, but as the vinegar is
only cooked in the catsup about three minutes, a great deal of
extraction could not be expected from that source. Not only the volatile
oils, but organic compounds called esters, and also some of the
non-volatile oils are extracted from the spices. The volatile oils
produce most of the flavor, however the esters also add to the flavor
considerably. The non-volatile or “fixed” oil of cayenne pepper has
quite a strong spicy flavor, although not nearly as strong as the
volatile oil of cayenne. The fixed oils of cassia, allspice, and mace
have no flavor at all.

Even though a bag of spices be boiled in two batches of forty-five
minutes each, a great deal of their flavor is still left in them. This
has been proven by chemical analyses of spice residues. Even quite a
large percentage of the volatile oils still remain in the spice residue,
and, of course, a larger percentage of the non-volatile or fixed oils.
It is a question, however, as to whether the extraction of the volatile
oil of these spice residues would be a paying proposition. So far as I
know, none of the distillers of essential oils seem to be interested in
them.


                             Storing Spices

Spices should not be held in storage for a long time, particularly in
open bins, as some of their volatile oils pass off little by little into
the air and are lost. This is especially true of cassia, either ground
or broken. They should be stored in a dry place, as some of them are apt
to mold if left in an atmosphere of condensing steam, and of course this
mold would contaminate the catsup to some extent. I have seen mace which
was in a very moldy condition due to its having been stored in the cook
room for some time, and having collected moisture. Some of the milder
varieties of pepper are also known to become moldy on exposure to
extreme dampness.


                           Quality of Flavor

A great deal could be written about the quality of various varieties of
the same spice. All of these varieties will not be discussed here but I
will try to show how the packer is sometimes mislead by spice salesmen
who show chemical analyses of their spices as positive proof of the
actual value that they contain. As a matter of fact, the true value of a
spice cannot be shown by a chemical analysis.

Take, for example, cassia. The finest flavored cassia is the Saigon
cassia, which can be obtained in the thin quill, the medium bark, and in
the thick bark. At the other extreme we have the China cassia, which is
considerably cheaper than the Saigon. If the catsup packer is going to
judge his spices according to strength, he may find that he gets more
strength from the cheap cassia than from the expensive one. The chemical
analysis may show that the China cassia contains more essential oil than
the Saigon does. In fact, this is often the case. However, what about
the quality of that essential oil? There is the point. The essential oil
extracted from the Saigon is different from that extracted from the
China cassia. It has a more delicate, refined flavor. Its flavor is more
pleasing to the palate, and is free from “harshness,” and “strength” of
an unrefined nature.

This does not mean that one cannot make a nice flavored catsup with
China cassia, as such is not the case, but a better flavor can be
obtained with Saigon. The point is that quality of flavor as well as
quantity of flavor must be considered. Chemical analyses are only of
value when exactly the same variety of two or more samples of spice are
compared.

When it comes to cayenne pepper, the quality of the flavor is not the
important factor that it is in the milder spices. Cayenne is used to
give “hotness” to the catsup, and the hotter the cayenne is, the greater
its value to the packer. The Mombassa and the Japan chillies are the
hottest, although in recent years they have been so expensive that it is
more economical to use some of the others, even though a slightly larger
quantity may be required.

For allspice, it is not necessary to use a large, fancy berry, but a
small size which is fairly free from sticks, stones, and decayed or
pithy berries will answer the purpose just as well. The relative values
of samples can be compared by inspecting them and noting the percentage
of foreign and decayed material.

As to cloves, it is again not necessary to use a fancy article, although
all varieties will not impart exactly the same flavor, just as in the
case of cassia a different flavor is obtained from Saigon and China
cassia. Some packers like the flavor of the Zanzibar cloves, while
others give another variety slight preference, chief among which are the
Penang, Amboyna, and Pemba.

Penang and Banda are the fanciest varieties of mace, but some of the
other varieties are all right for catsup, with the exception of Bombay
mace, which has no flavor, and is considered an adulterant.


                         Use of Essential Oils

In many cases spices are not used at all, but their essential oils are
used instead. In other cases both spices and oils are used. Some packers
object to the use of cloves on account of the large amount of tannic
acid they contain (usually from 16 to 20%), which it is thought has a
darkening tendency, especially if any iron is present, and it is also
thought that other darkening substances are extracted from the cloves.
If the essential oil is used, this is avoided.

Essential oils, when added properly, produce a catsup of good flavor,
and the product is in every way acceptable. A better flavor, however,
can be obtained by the use of whole spices. A water extract obtained
from whole spices is different from the essential oil of the spice. It
contains the essential oil, part of it at least, but it also contains
other substances which impart flavor. The flavor produced by whole
spices is not quite as harsh as that produced by essential oils. “Harsh”
is not exactly the word, but it comes about as close to it as anything I
can think of. The whole spices impart a wealth of flavor, but there is
freedom from “strongness,” or any faint suggestion of a “drugstore
taste.” I have tasted catsups made with oils in which this “drugstore
taste”—I use the term for lack of a better one—was apparent, and it may
have been due to the quality of the essential oils used, but more than
likely was due to the fact that they were not properly administered. It
is necessary to get the oils thoroughly and evenly incorporated into the
catsup without volatilizing too much of them.


                       How to Add Essential Oils

The best way I know of to do this is as follows: Add the oil from a
small lipped container, like an 8 oz. glass graduate, after the catsup
is cooked, that is, just as soon as the steam is shut off of the batch,
spreading it slowly over the entire surface of the catsup, not dumping
it in one spot; then turn the steam on full, and leave it on five
seconds; then shut it off immediately, and open the exhaust. This will
not make an absolutely perfect mixture of the oil in the catsup, but it
will do the job better than agitators, and by only leaving the steam on
five seconds very little of the oil is lost by volatilization. The
brushing of the catsup through the finishing machine also helps in more
thoroughly mixing in the oil, and if the catsup is then pumped from the
finisher to a receiving tank over the filling machine, as is often done,
the mixing is made still more complete by the pumping process. If a
number of different essential oils are used they are mixed together
before adding. One large manufacturer whose catsup is well liked uses no
whole spices at all, even using oleo resin capsicum instead of ground
cayenne pepper. Oleo resin capsicum is much hotter than the ground
cayenne, and, of course, a very small quantity of it is required.


                                Paprika

Paprika is used to a very large extent in catsup, chiefly because of its
bright red color, which assists to some extent in toning up the color of
a catsup that would otherwise be rather unattractive because of its
brownish cast. If any appreciable help is to be obtained from paprika,
it must be used in large quantity, and it must be of the most brilliant
red variety. Much paprika has a dull brick or brownish color, and it
might as well be left out. The use of only a pound of paprika to 100
gallons of catsup scarcely produces any effect on the color. If paprika
is used, at least two pounds should be used for this quantity of catsup,
otherwise it might almost as well be omitted. Of course, paprika is a
spice as well as a color, and on that account it can be used in catsup
without any statement on the label to the effect that the product is
colored artificially. It does impart some flavor, but the flavor isn’t
particularly desirable in catsup. If paprika was yellow or brown,
instead of red, it is doubtful if it would be used at all in catsup;
certainly it would not be used extensively.

Most of the best catsups on the market are made without paprika, and
these catsups are as a rule the most brilliant in color, as they are
made almost entirely from fresh tomatoes. The color is not killed by a
long succession of cooking processes, and therefore the use of paprika
is unnecessary and would add absolutely nothing to the color.

Paprika is a rather poor excuse for a coloring matter anyway. The
coloring principle in the spice is not soluble in the catsup, and all of
the color is retained within the grains of the powder. If this coloring
principle dissolved in the catsup, as does cochineal, the effect would
be very good. The use of paprika is very easily detected by pouring out
a bit of the catsup on a piece of paper, and making a thin layer of it.
The grains of paprika then stand out very prominently.

Some catsups are literally “loaded” with paprika, and they have a sort
of brick color, which is somewhat different from the color produced by
fresh, ripe tomatoes. This catsup would no doubt be brown if so much
paprika wasn’t used. As to flavor, such goods are usually not very good,
and are often very poor indeed.


                Quantities of Spices and Oils per Batch

As to the quantity of spices to use per 100 gallons of catsup, I would
suggest 3 oz. of ground cayenne pepper, 1½ lbs. of medium bark, broken
Saigon cassia, 1¼ lbs. of whole allspice, and 1¼ lbs. of whole cloves.
The cassia, allspice, and cloves go in a sack, and the cayenne goes in
direct at the beginning of the cooking. If paprika is used it is put in
with the cayenne. If the essential oil of cloves is preferred to the
whole spice, 1 oz. of it will give a pronounced clove taste, although
not too pronounced.

If it is desired to use essential oils altogether, with the exception of
the cayenne pepper, a good mixture is ½ oz. oil of cassia, 1 oz. oil of
cloves, and ½ oz. oil of pimento. A good flavored catsup can also be
obtained with the amounts of pepper, oil of cassia, and oil of cloves
given above, but with no oil of pimento.

It should be remembered that with these oils the most important point is
the successful administration of them. Giving proper quantities to use
amounts to nothing if they are improperly administered. In fact, any
kind of a formula for making a tomato product amounts to very little in
itself. It doesn’t make any difference how fine a formula a man has, it
by no means assures a good product. When the formula is obtained a bare
start is made. In the hands of one manufacturer excellent results will
be obtained with the use of a formula, while another man who has
practically the same formula will make an absolute failure of his
manufacturing.


                       Essential Oils Economical

The use of spice oils is more economical as far as the actual expense of
the formula is concerned, and it is also very convenient, as you have
your flavoring in small packages in a highly concentrated form. As these
oils are distilled from spices which are wormy, or for some other reason
not marketable as whole spices, the spice from which they are distilled
can be obtained very cheap. As a rule the oils are distilled where the
spices are grown, and only the essential oil is imported. In order to
make the oils comply with the regulations of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, it
is usually necessary to re-distill them here, as they often contain lead
from being transported in lead containers.


                     Adulteration of Ground Spices

If ground spices are used they should be bought from a concern of very
high standing, as their adulteration is by no means an uncommon
practice. Deception is, of course, difficult in whole spices. Such
adulteration as the use of ten or twenty per cent of ground pepper
shells in ground pepper has frequently been discovered by government
chemists. Ground olive stones, sawdust, brick dust, ground cocoanut
shells, and many other inert substances have also been found in ground
spices. Adulteration can almost always be detected by either
microscopical or chemical examination, but there have been cases where
the adulteration has been so cleverly done that the only way it could be
verified was by detective work on the part of government agents.


                           Onions and Garlic

Onions for catsup need not be carefully peeled, as a little peeling will
not impart any foreign taste. It is well, however, to remove that part
of the peeling which is dry and comes off easily. The finishing machine
will remove that portion of the peeling which is left.

The sweet Bermuda onions are not as good for catsup as are the stronger
kind, as it takes too many of them to impart a distinct onion flavor.
The onions should, of course, be washed if they are not clean when taken
from the sack. Some firms use an onion washing and peeling machine and
they like the machine very much. A coarse grinding of the onions is
sufficient.

Some packers use garlic and some do not. Garlic is treated in exactly
the same way as onions but should be ground rather fine. The cloves of
the garlic should be removed from the enveloping tissue, but it is not
necessary to separate the individual cloves from the hard, fibrous
coating which surrounds them.

Onions and garlic should be added as soon as all of the tomato juice for
the batch is boiling in the kettle. For a 100 gallon batch, two gallons
of chopped onions and ½ lb. of ground garlic are about the right
amounts. Ground onions and garlic should not be left standing over
night, as they get black and lose their flavor. In cases where some are
unavoidably left over, they should be covered with vinegar and salt.


                                 Sugars

The sugars most commonly used in catsup are granulated cane, clarified
cane, granulated beet, and raw, unrefined sugars.

The purest of these are granulated cane and granulated beet, which are
equally good. There is a prejudice against beet sugar by many people in
the east, who think it is not as good as cane sugar, but this is a
mistaken idea. Any food chemist will tell you that they are the same,
and are equally good. All granulated sugar, whether cane or beet, must
contain at least 99.5% of sucrose (pure sugar) to comply with the
federal standard. And remember that sucrose is sucrose, whether derived
from sugar cane or sugar beet. Almost all granulated sugar will test
99.8% sucrose, which is slightly above the minimum established by the
government. This leaves a negligible quantity of impurities, which in
the case of beet sugar are derived from the beet, and in cane sugar from
the cane. If there is any difference between the two sugars it lies in
this very minute quantity of impurities and such a difference can surely
not be objected to. Granulated sugar, whether cane or beet, is the
purest food article in commerce.

Clarified cane sugar is not quite as pure as granulated, but when used
in catsup will make equally as good a product as granulated will;
however, as the percentage of sucrose is not so high, a little more of
it has to be used. A considerable saving can often be made by buying
clarified instead of granulated sugar, but the purchase should be made
on polariscope test, so the buyer knows exactly what he is getting.

Raw sugars are slightly less pure than clarified, although there is very
little difference between the best grades of raw sugar and clarified.
Good centrifugal raw sugar will contain about 96.5% of sucrose. The
lower grades of raw sugars should not be used, as they are dark and will
darken the catsup to some extent, but there is scarcely any color to the
better grades, and they give good results. The use of raw sugars often
permits quite a saving on the sugar bill. They should be bought on
polariscope test, and when received should be tested against the sample
on which they were bought.


                              Sugar Syrups

“Cane sugar syrups” have for several years been offered to canners and
preservers, and they are advertised to be equal pound for pound to
granulated sugar and to be considerably cheaper. The samples of these
heavy, colorless syrups that I have tested have contained a considerable
percentage of invert sugar, and also moisture. The moisture is, of
course, worthless, and as the invert sugar is less sweet than sucrose it
is ridiculous to claim that such a product is equal in sweetness to
granulated sugar. These syrups are said to be used by some catsup
makers, however the saving that is effected by their use is probably
imaginary.

The sugar can be added at any time after all the tomato juice for the
batch is boiling in the kettle. Some prefer to add it at the end of the
batch so as to run less danger of scorching; however, if the coils are
clean, and there is a good head of steam, and the taps are working
right, there need be no fear of burning, even if the sugar is added
twenty minutes before the batch is done. The sugar should be put in
small pails or boxes, so that it can be scattered easily over the
surface of the boiling pulp. If it is put in heavy containers it is apt
to be dumped in one spot, and may not all dissolve, as much of it may
fall in a lump below the coil where the circulation is not good.

If the coils or traps are not working properly, or the tomatoes are a
little green, and the cook is having trouble with the catsup burning on
the coils badly, it is advisable to not add the sugar until a few
minutes before the batch is done.

If 10½ gallons of 100 grain vinegar are used to a 100–gallon batch,
about 105 pounds of granulated sugar will be required.


                    Use of Sugar in Large Quantities

It should not be thought that extra sugar is going to increase the
volume of catsup in proportion to the volume of extra sugar added. I am
reminded in this connection of a conversation I had with a large catsup
packer, in which we were discussing the large amount of sugar and
vinegar required to insure the keeping quality of non-preservative
catsup, as compared with the amounts usually used in benzoate goods.
This packer made non-preservative goods altogether, and he surprised me
by remarking: “What if we do have to use a hundred pounds or so more
sugar to the batch; we buy the sugar at 8c a pound, and sell it for
about 11c a pound in catsup. Where do we lose anything?” I was surprised
at the remark because I thought he should know better than that. If
catsup was bought and sold by weight that argument might hold good.
However, regardless of the fact that the net weight in pounds and ounces
avoirdupois is always stated on the label, the public buys catsup by
volume. Your pint bottle may hold 17 oz. avoirdupois, or it may hold 18
oz; however, in the eyes of the consumer it is a pint, and it will not
bring more money because its net weight is slightly greater than that in
the pint size of some other brand. It is the same way with the 10 oz.
and 11 oz. sizes. The public buys by volume. When we quote prices on the
larger sizes, it is so many dozen No. 10 at so much per dozen, or so
many dozen gallon jars at so much per gallon. Who cares what the net
weight is in the No. 10 can, or the gallon jar, as long as the container
is full—or as full as it should be?

Therefore, the subject of gain or loss caused by the addition of extra
sugar resolves itself into the question of the additional volume
produced. If I add a hundred pounds more of sugar per batch, how much
will my volume be increased? That is the question. It is one which I
cannot answer definitely, and I have never seen any figures on it, but I
can say this much—that every pound of sugar added to catsup in excess of
the minimum amount required is a very great loss to the packer. A 5–gal.
pail of granulated sugar will not add anywhere near five gallons to the
catsup. One gallon will come nearer to it. The reason for this is that
the sugar dissolves in the tomato juice, and although it increases the
specific gravity of that juice, it adds very little to its volume.

As to the extra vinegar which must be added to counteract the sweetness
of this extra sugar, this is an absolute loss as far as volume is
concerned. The catsup must be reduced to a definite thickness, no matter
how much vinegar is used, and if more vinegar is used, more water must
be boiled out to allow for the thinning down caused by this additional
vinegar.


                                  Salt

An air dried salt of a fair degree of purity (about 98 per cent on a
moisture-free basis) is perfectly satisfactory for catsup. The purer
salts are often desirable in the canning of vegetables where lime and
magnesia are apt to have a toughening or hardening effect, but in catsup
a very small quantity of lime and magnesia salts have no ill effect.

Salt should be added a few minutes before the vinegar is put in. It is
desirable to add the salt toward the end of the cooking, as it acts to
some extent on the copper of the coil or kettle. Great care should be
used in so adding the salt that it will all dissolve. I have often seen
a large mass of undissolved salt in the bottom of a cooking tank after a
batch of catsup was let down, even when the salt had been thrown in a
half hour before the cooking was completed. The reason for this was that
the salt was thrown in without scattering it, and it fell quickly to the
bottom of the tank in one mass. Owing to the fact that the circulation
below the coil was poor, and that salt does not dissolve readily in
boiling water or boiling tomato juice, a large proportion of it remained
undissolved.

Salt is less soluble in hot water than in cold water. It should be
placed in small containers, such as small pails or boxes, so that it
will be light in weight and can easily be scattered over the surface of
the boiling pulp. If this is done, and done slowly, there is no need of
agitating devices to dissolve the salt. Agitators are also unnecessary
to dissolve the sugar if it is added in this way, although sugar
dissolves more readily than salt.

Thirty pounds of salt is about the right amount for a 100–gallon batch.


                                Vinegar

The kind of vinegar usually used in catsup is the strong distilled
vinegar—about 100 grain, which contains 10 per cent of acetic acid. The
stronger the vinegar, the better, as the weaker vinegars require too
much volume to be handled, and dilute the catsup too much when they are
added.

Most manufacturers buy their vinegar in barrels. However, some of the
larger ones have it shipped in tank cars from which it is pumped at the
factory into a large storage tank, and siphoned off as needed. This is
the better way when it is used in large enough quantities to warrant
buying it in this manner. Barreled vinegar often contains very finely
divided charcoal, which is sometimes hard to strain out; the barrels are
often full of nails from which the vinegar dissolves iron, and this
iron, in combination with the tannic acid of spices, produces a chemical
compound (iron tannate) which is as black as ink; and sometimes the
barrels contain some foreign liquid, which was left in them when they
were filled with vinegar. The use of barrels also requires a lot of
handling, and the waste by evaporation through the wood is considerable
when the vinegar is held over a long time. One might imagine that the
evaporation from a large storage tank would be greater than from
barrels. However, such is not the case, as there is much more surface
per gallon for evaporation in the barrel than in the large tank. Vinegar
shipped in tank cars is free from contamination and is easily and
economically handled. Barreled vinegar should always be strained through
fine cheesecloth.


                        Transference of Vinegar

The use of steam pumps and ejectors, in fact any kind of steam appliance
for hoisting vinegar, should not be used, as the steam passes into the
vinegar, dissolves in it, and dilutes it. If you pump 100–grain vinegar
into a storage tank with a steam pump you may find that you have
90–grain when you get it up there. If it is necessary to pump the
vinegar, and it usually is, a small electric pump should be used. Either
enamel lined or wooden pipe should be used for vinegar. All iron pipe
and fittings should be eliminated.


                           Adding the Vinegar

Vinegar should be added about three minutes before the batch is done. To
do this it is usually necessary to cook the catsup just a shade heavier
before the vinegar is added than it will be when it is done. If a
hydrometer is used, about two degrees is enough. Five minutes should be
the outside limit for cooking the vinegar. Vinegar is a volatile liquid
and vaporizes rapidly. It should therefore only be cooked long enough to
insure its being thoroughly incorporated in the catsup, and three
minutes boiling is ample for this purpose. For a 100–gallon batch, 10½
gallons of 100 grain vinegar is about the right amount, and when
properly added will give an average total acidity of about 1.25 per cent
calculated as acetic acid.


                                Acidity

It should be understood that this total acidity will by no means be
constant, as there is such a great variation in the natural acidity of
tomatoes. Tomato pulp made from tomatoes all grown in the same locality,
and condensed to a specific gravity of 1.035, will run as low as 0.40
per cent in natural acidity, and as high as 0.70 per cent. This will
cause the total acidity of the catsup to vary accordingly. When in doubt
as to whether you are getting the proper acidity, send samples to a
chemist and have the acetic acidity determined. This is the acidity of
the vinegar alone. It should not run below 0.60 per cent. This figure
should be taken as the absolute minimum for acetic acidity.


                      Testing the Finishing Point

For testing the finishing point of catsup I recommend either testing by
the eye or the hydrometer method as described under the testing of pulp.
The eye cannot often be relied upon, although some experienced cooks are
very good at judging by the eye, and they do not need a mechanical
device of any kind. The specific gravity determination by weight, and
cooking to a certain gauge, or for a certain length of time, will not do
at all for catsup. I have used the hydrometer method on catsup for a
number of years, and it is entirely satisfactory. A little experimenting
will indicate the number of degrees on the hydrometer, when immersed in
the hot catsup, at which the catsup is heavy enough so that it will be
of the right thickness when cold. After this point has been determined
every batch should be almost exactly alike if it is cooked to this
point.


                            Holding Batches

Catsup should not be held in the cooking kettle very long, as the sugar
is apt to caramelize where the catsup is in contact with the hot surface
of the kettle or coil. Also, the air darkens it somewhat. Of course, if
the jacket or coil is completely exhausted, and the valves are
absolutely tight, there should not be this burning or caramelization
while holding a batch. However, there is often a very slight leak in the
valve, and the coil or jacket is thus kept hot constantly. The quicker
the cooked batch is let out of the kettle, the better.


                        Making Catsup From Pulp

Many catsup makers make their catsup from pulp altogether. They feel
that during the season they have their hands full packing pulp, and they
can work this pulp up into catsup during the winter months when there
would otherwise be little or nothing to do. When pulp is used, about 29
5–gal. cans of specific gravity 1.035 is sufficient for a batch of
catsup of 100 gallons. Do not add water to the pulp, even if it is a
little heavy. The only danger from not getting a very long cook is that
there will not be a very complete extraction of the spices, when whole
spices are used in a sack. If, however, each spice bag is cooked in two
batches, this danger is greatly minimized.

The question now arises—if I am making catsup from pulp which has been
put through a catsup finisher I am working with material which is
screened fine, whereas my hydrometer test is based on tomato juice from
my cyclone, which is coarser than this, and this finely screened stuff
will give me a different hydrometer reading. If you cook your catsup to,
say, 32 degrees, when making it direct from cycloned tomato juice, you
will probably find that 28 degrees is enough when making it from pulp
which has been put through a catsup finisher. The finisher makes this
much difference.


                        Use of Benzoate of Soda

The use of benzoate of soda in catsup permits of the use of a much
smaller quantity of vinegar and sugar than is used in non-preservative
goods. About 3 gallons of 100 grain vinegar to a 100–gallon batch is all
that is usually used, and this only makes it necessary to use about 50
lbs. of sugar.

The benzoate of soda is added just about a minute before the batch is
done.

It should be remembered that if ⅒th of 1% of benzoate of soda is being
used, this percentage is by weight, and that a gallon of cold catsup
weighs 9 or 9½ lbs., depending upon the amount of sugar that is used.



                               CHAPTER X
        FINISHING, BOTTLING, STERILIZING, AND STORING THE CATSUP


                    The Receiving Tank and Finisher

From the cooking kettles the catsup is usually run through the finisher,
and then conducted to a receiving tank, either by gravity or by pumping.
If a pump is used, care should be taken that the pump parts which come
in contact with the catsup are of bronze. Needless to say, enamel lined
pipe should be used. The receiving tank should be either of wood, or
enamel, or glass-lined steel.

Regarding the finishing of the catsup, the action on the metal screen is
more severe than in pulp, and it is best to use a monel metal screen. It
will usually be noticed that the frothy catsup which collects at the
large end of the cone of the screen blackens quickly. This is probably
due to the air, and this catsup should be scraped off into a pail as it
collects, and mixed back in the cooking kettle, just giving it a minute
cook. It is also very important to see that the screen fits absolutely
tight, and to frequently inspect it for small cuts which are often made
by pieces of tin or glass accidentally getting into the catsup.


                          Filling and Sealing

If the catsup is to be sterilized after bottling it is usually just run
through an ordinary enamel lined pipe from the receiving tank to the
filling machine, but if it is not to be given an after-sterilization a
steam-jacketed pipe should be used here. This will be discussed further
later in the chapter.

Rotary fillers are being used quite commonly for catsup now, and they do
the work rapidly, with little waste, and with a small labor outlay per
gross for bottling. The more simple types of fillers, operated either
with a foot or hand lever, are less expensive, and also do the work
quite well, although not as rapidly as the rotary fillers.

The empty bottles should be washed in hot water on a rotary bottle
washing machine, and filled directly after washing if an
after-sterilization is to be used. If the catsup is not to be processed
after bottling, the empty bottles should be given a hot air
sterilization after they are washed, and the bottles conducted to the
filling machine from the sterilizer.

If an automatic rotary filler is used, the bottle capping machine is
usually regulated to operate at the same speed as the filler, and the
whole line becomes automatic. The type of closure most commonly used now
is the crown style, either plain or of the self-opening type. The cork
is getting to be a thing of the past for catsup. These closures come
either with a composition cork insert or with a solid cork insert, the
former being a little cheaper, and for catsup it is just as good. For
chili sauce, or any bottle having a wide mouth, I do not like the
composition cork insert, as the vacuum produced in a wide-mouthed bottle
on cooling is too great a strain on the composition, and is apt to cause
it to crack. For narrow-mouthed bottles such as catsup, the composition
cork is all right.


                       Washing the Filled Bottles

Whether or not an after-sterilization is used, the filled bottles should
be run through a warm water bath immediately after sealing to wash off
any catsup which adheres to the outside of the bottle before it has a
chance to bake on. If this water bath has a couple of jets of compressed
air entering it to keep the water vigorously agitated, the bottles will
come out nice and clean. Of course, a continuous flow of clean water
must be allowed to pass into the bath, with an overflow at the opposite
end. If bottles of catsup are put into processing tanks with catsup
adhering to the outside of the bottle, the soluble part of the catsup
will be dissolved in the process water but there will be flakes of
insoluble tomato fiber floating in the process water everywhere, and
these will bake on the bottles so hard that it is very hard to remove.
After a few days this condition in the process tanks becomes very bad,
and the bottles become increasingly hard to clean. If the bottles are
clean when they are put into the tanks, and the tanks are clean, they
will come out of the tanks clean and ready to be labeled.


                               Processing

The process method is probably used by the majority of catsup packers,
first, because they feel that an after-sterilization is an insurance
which is well worth paying for, and they can have more peace of mind
knowing that they have processed their goods; second, because by
processing carefully and intelligently the color and flavor of their
goods will be scarcely effected, except when made from pulp which is a
little overcooked; third, because they don’t know much about packing
catsup so that it will keep without processing, and they don’t care to
experiment, as they feel that in the end the experimenting may prove
disastrous to their business.

In this attitude no one can blame them. There is nothing more trying on
a manufacturer than having complaints on fermentation coming in from
every corner of the country. The natural inclination is to let well
enough alone, and take no chances.

At the same time it must be admitted that thousands of cases of catsup
are being manufactured every day without processing, and it is giving
little or no trouble. Those who use this system say it is a waste of
time and money to process, and that years of experience have shown that
processing is unnecessary.


                   Advantages of Omitting Processing

There are certain advantages in not processing. In the first place a
better colored and flavored product is often obtained, particularly if
the catsup is made from pulp, and especially is this true if the pulp is
a little overcooked, and consequently a little dark in color. Then there
is the advantage of the saving on labor and on steam, which is a large
item. Running a half dozen or more process tanks constantly draws
heavily on the steam supply, and the processing means more handling of
the bottled product, and therefore more labor. It also means more
equipment, with the floor space which this equipment takes—not only a
lot of tanks, in case stationary tanks are used, but iron baskets to
hold the bottles, electric or steam hoist, and trolley track. Not only
the original cost but the maintenance of this equipment is considerable.
Then there is a certain amount of breakage during processing. Also,
steam must be kept up late at night for no other purpose than
processing.

When no after-sterilization is used all of this is done away with, and
the only equipment needed to supplant the above is a steam-jacketed pipe
to conduct the catsup to the filling machine, and a continuous hot air
sterilizer for the bottles, which usually consists of a vertical shaft,
and takes up practically no floor space.


                             Process Method

I will discuss in detail the process method first. The catsup should be
filled as hot as possible, and it is a good idea to use a steam-jacketed
pipe in this case, as well as in the non-process method, because the
hotter the catsup is when bottled, the quicker the center of the bottle
will be raised to the desired temperature, and the quicker the
sterilization can be accomplished. The catsup should be 180 degrees or
above when it enters the tank of the filling machine, and it should be
placed in the process tanks as soon after sealing as possible.

The process tanks may be large stationary iron tanks, or a continuous
pasteurizer such as is used in beer bottling plants may be used. The
latter is the better way, as it is compact, automatic, takes up very
little floor space, and there is no danger of over-sterilization, or of
scorching by leaving the bottles in the tanks after the water is drawn
off, where the air cannot get at them to cool them off. The reason
continuous pasteurizers are not used more commonly is their expense,
although they should pay for themselves in a few years by the labor and
steam they save, it being only necessary to keep one large tank in
operation instead of a half dozen or more.

If stationary tanks are used, which is usually the case, the catsup
should be taken out of them as soon as the water is drawn off, so that
the air can get at the bottles and cool them off. To leave the hot,
bottled catsup in the tanks over night is almost as bad as piling a lot
of hot pulp close together, the only difference being that there is a
little more room for air circulation between the catsup bottles, but not
much.


                          Time and Temperature

There is a great difference between the time and temperature employed
for processing in different factories. Some packers process as low as
170 degrees F., it is said, while others use a temperature very close to
the boiling point. In some plants pint bottles receive only a 30–minute
process, while in others they get over an hour.

The proper time to use depends upon the temperature that can be
maintained at the filling machine, and the rapidity with which the
processing can be done after the filling. If the packer can hold his
catsup around 180 degrees at the filler, and is so equipped, either with
continuous pasteurizers or stationary tanks, that he can process
immediately, an hour is ample time for pints, and 45 minutes is
sufficient for half-pints; other sizes accordingly. If, however, the
temperature of the catsup at the filler often falls to 170 degrees or
below, and the catsup is filled faster than it can be processed, so that
at times much of it must stand for an hour before it can get in the
process tanks, 15 minutes additional for each size bottle had better be
added to the above.

This may seem to some packers like a long time. All one has to do to
convince himself that it is not too long is to take one of those
thermometers which are made especially for determining temperatures at
the center of the bottle, and put it in a bottle of catsup while it is
being processed, watch the mercury rise, and note the time it takes to
bring the center of the bottle to the temperature of the water
surrounding it. You will find that if the water surrounding a pint
bottle is 200 degrees, and the temperature at the center of the bottle
is 160 degrees, it will take just about an hour to bring the catsup at
the center of the bottle up to 200 degrees.

As to the proper temperature, I do not see why as high a temperature as
is possible without breaking the bottles should not be used. Why some
packers process at 170 degrees or 180 degrees I do not know. They
certainly have not carefully investigated the effect of their
processing. The temperature I prefer is six degrees below boiling. At
sea level this would be 206 degrees. This temperature will not break the
bottles, but the steam pipes entering the tank should be so arranged and
perforated that there will be as even a distribution of steam as
possible. If these pipes are not properly arranged, there is apt to be
as much as 6 degrees variation in the temperature at different parts of
the tank.

Several years ago I made a large number of tests to determine the number
of micro-organisms that remained alive in bottled catsup after
processing at 206 degrees F., as compared with the number which remained
alive in catsup bottled from the same batch and processed at 200 degrees
F. for the same length of time. The difference was surprising. I
expected some difference, but not nearly as great as was shown by the
tests. That which was processed at 200 degrees for an hour contained
quite a few living molds, yeasts, and bacteria per cubic centimeter.
This was shown by plating out samples bacteriologically on culture
media—the media used being dextrose agar and wart agar. The catsup from
the same batch processed one hour at 206 degrees contained scarcely any
living micro-organisms at all per cubic centimeter. This test was
repeated a number of times with the same result each time. These
micro-organisms may have been in the form of spores in the catsup, but
developed into the vegetative forms of molds, yeasts, and bacteria when
placed in the culture media.


             Temperature Controlling and Recording Devices

The process tanks should all be equipped with temperature controllers
and recording thermometers. The controller holds the steam at the right
point, not allowing the temperature to vary more than 2 degrees, if it
is a good make. Several years ago it was impossible to find a
temperature controller which operated without compressed air that would
hold the temperature closer than a variation of 10 degrees, which is too
wide a variation for catsup pasteurization. The compressed air
controllers worked very well but required an air compressor where the
pressure must be held within certain limits, and air pipes to connect
with all the controllers. Some plants did not have the air equipment,
and in cases where it was put in the pipes gave more or less trouble due
to the collection of moisture in them and to occasional grains of dust
or rust from the air tank which lodged in the controller and threw it
off. It is now possible, however, to obtain controllers which will
operate with almost no variation from the temperature desired, and which
require no compressed air for their proper functioning. Under these
conditions there is hardly an excuse for a manufacturer to operate his
plant on the old system of hand control of the steam valves, with the
resulting losses in manufactured goods due to pure reliance on human
efficiency.

The recording thermometer makes a pen and ink record on a chart showing
the temperature and length of time each tank of catsup is given, or, if
a continuous pasteurizer is used, it shows up any variations in the
temperature of the water in that pasteurizer during the day. The factory
manager can look at all of these charts in the morning, and know
positively that every bottle of catsup was processed the right length of
time, and at the right temperature. If any mistakes were made the chart
will show it, and it will show at just what time the mistake was made,
and how serious it was. It is a great satisfaction to have such a
record, and the processor invariably takes great pride in making a
perfect chart.


                           Non-Process Method

When no after-sterilization is given, it is imperative that the catsup
be very hot when filled. Boiling catsup runs about 214 degrees F. in
temperature, and although running it through the finisher and receiving
tank cools it down somewhat, if it is heated in a long jacketed pipe
while being conveyed from receiving tank to filling machine it should
not be below 180 degrees at the very lowest when filled, and if it can
be filled hotter than that, so much the better. As to the pipe above
mentioned, the smaller the pipe, and the larger the steam jacket, and
the higher the steam pressure, the greater will be the heating capacity
of this jacket on the catsup. After a little experimenting these points
can be adjusted to give the proper result. If the jacketed area is
short, of course a higher steam pressure must be used than if this area
is long.

Some packers of non-processed catsup use a jacketed tank or kettle
directly over the filling machine to hold the catsup at a high
temperature while it is awaiting bottling, with a very short line of
enamel pipe going from it to the filling machine. If this is used, a
jacketed pipe is not needed.

Guesswork should be eliminated. Do not assume that you are getting the
right temperature on your catsup when it is filled, and do not be
satisfied with going up to the filler once or twice a day, dropping a
thermometer in the liquid, and waiting for the temperature to record
itself. Put a recording thermometer in that tank just over the filling
tubes, with the dial in a prominent place, so that you can step up to it
at any time and know what the exact temperature of that catsup has been
every minute of the time for the past ten or twelve hours.

If this is done there is no chance of escape on the part of the man who
is supposed to watch this temperature, and if he knows his work is being
recorded every minute on a chart he is going to be mighty careful.

The empty bottles, when placed in the filling machine, should be clean
and practically sterile. After they have passed around the rotary bottle
washer, and had a thorough washing with hot water, they are placed in
the hot air sterilizer neck down, so they can drain. The best kind of
sterilizer is an endless chain carrying trays to hold about a dozen
bottles each, and enclosed and protected by either wood or metal. The
sterilizer should be vertical, so that it will not occupy much floor
space, and inside of the wood or metal covering are steam pipes fitted
with a temperature controller or thermostat so that a temperature of
about 250 degrees F. can be maintained. The speed of the endless chain
is so regulated that it takes about 30 minutes from the time the bottles
enter the sterilizer until they come out.

Needless to say, the filling machine should be kept scrupulously clean,
and before being used in the morning, or for the afternoon run, should
be thoroughly steamed out so that it will be hot and practically sterile
to receive the first batch of catsup.

As to the bottle closures, if they are kept in covered barrels in a
clean place and not allowed to be contaminated by dust, etc., it is not
considered necessary to sterilize them, although they could no doubt be
given a hot air sterilization very easily if it was thought necessary. I
have seen thousands of cases packed without sterilizing the closures,
and the catsup never gave any trouble.

After applying the closure the bottles are rinsed off in a warm water
bath, and are then ready to be labeled and cased.


                      Which Method Is the Better?

Now comes the question which is of vital importance to every packer—what
am I going to do—give my catsup an after-sterilization or not? I believe
the answer to that question should depend upon the conditions under
which the packer operates. I do not believe either method is to be
recommended universally, but that there are many cases where it is
better not to process, and other cases where processing is advisable.

If a manufacturer makes his product at a large central plant, where he
can count on reliable and fairly intelligent help at all times, and
where he is so equipped that he is not bothered with frequent breakdowns
and delays during the day’s run, he should give the non-processing
method his careful consideration, and I believe he will profit by
adopting it. If, on the other hand, he has many plants scattered all
over the country, many of them dependent to a large extent on an
indifferent class of help, with little experience or intelligence, or he
has a lot of wornout equipment, and has several breakdowns almost every
day in the bottling department, he had better insure his product by
processing.

If I were building a new plant or remodeling an old one, I would most
certainly arrange to eliminate processing if I could count on a fairly
good class of help.


                          Labeling and Casing

Most bottles are labeled by machine. The machines do the work much
faster than can be done by hand, and also do it neater as a rule.
However, in most cases it is necessary to have someone to adjust the
neck band after the bottle leaves the machine. Sometimes they are
wrapped, and sometimes not. Wrapping in transparent tissue makes a very
attractive package, and it will modify the effect of strong light, which
some manufacturers think has a discoloring tendency if the catsup is
exposed to it a long time.

Both wood and fiber cases are used for catsup, and the fiber cases seem
to do all right where the contents do not weigh over about 40 lbs. If
they weigh more than that it is usually considered advisable to use wood
cases.


                 Stacking Catsup to Avoid “Black Neck”

In CHAPTER VIII mention was made of the darkening in the neck of the
bottle, called “black neck.” It was stated that this was usually due to
the fact that the closure is not absolutely air tight, and allows the
air to very slowly filter into the space in the neck, which should be a
vacuum if the seal is perfectly tight. This condition can be partly
avoided by printing the cases so that when the case is stacked right
side up the catsup will be neck down in the case. Therefore, the vacuum
space will be at the bottom of the bottle, instead of at the neck, and
there is no chance for air to filter into the neck because the body of
the catsup is right up against the closure. When these cases are shipped
out and stacked in a warehouse, the catsup will always be bottom up as
long as the cases are right side up. In all probability the bottles will
remain in this position until the case is unpacked by the retailer and
the bottles are placed on the shelves.


                      Packing Gallons and No. 10’s

Packing catsup in gallon glass jars and enamel lined No. 10 cans is very
similar to packing it in bottles. These sizes can either be processed or
not processed, and the same principles apply as in packing the smaller
sizes. If no process is given, the containers should be put through a
hot air sterilizer, just as the small bottles are, and the catsup should
be very hot when filled.

With glass jars the breakage is often very great, and they must be
heated slowly and carefully, and placed on a warm wooden surface when
they are filled. A metal surface beneath the jars will almost always
cause a lot of breakage due to the fact that it chills so easily. For
the closure a cork is usually used, and the process should not exceed
180 degrees, as a higher temperature will cause the corks to pop out. A
process of two hours is sufficient for gallon jars.

If No. 10 catsup is given an after-sterilization, 1½ hours in boiling
water is sufficient. It must be understood that it takes much longer for
the heat to penetrate to the center of a can of catsup than it does with
pulp, as the catsup contains sugar and salt and is heavier in specific
gravity. After-sterilization the cans should be cooled gradually in
water, and allowed to remain in the water until they only have
sufficient heat left to allow the water to evaporate from the surface of
the can and prevent rusting.



                               CHAPTER XI
   THE MANUFACTURE OF CHILI SAUCE AND THE PULPING OF TOMATO TRIMMINGS


Chili sauce is the finest tomato product manufactured. It differs from
catsup in that it is made from whole peeled tomatoes with the seeds and
fiber left in, and in that it usually contains more onion than catsup,
and is usually a little “hotter.”


                          Grading the Tomatoes

For chili sauce the tomatoes are peeled as they are for canning. As a
rule they are run over a grader and only the large ones are used for
peeling, the small ones being pulped or made into catsup. It does not
pay to peel the small tomatoes, as it requires too much labor, and the
women who do the peeling at so much per bucket try to fight shy of them,
and often mash them up in their buckets to avoid having to peel them.
They will make just as good pulp or catsup as the large tomatoes will,
and much more can be got out of them in this way than if an attempt is
made to get them peeled.

Sometimes the small tomatoes and the peelings of the large tomatoes are
pulped together. If this is done the whole small tomatoes tone up the
flavor of the peelings, and also help to keep the final product within
safe limits as to microscopical count.

Some packers throw away the peelings, either because they are so busy
with the whole tomatoes that they can’t bother with them, or because
they are afraid the pulp which they are worked up into will run high in
micro-organisms, and they don’t want to have such pulp on their hands.


                      Method of Handling Tomatoes

The usual method of handling the tomatoes is to run them first over a
sorting belt, where they are inspected by several women, then over a
grader, which lets the small tomatoes fall through on to a belt which
conveys them to a washing arrangement, and thence to the “breaking
tanks,” or to the pulp machine, or the crusher, depending upon which
pulping method is used. The small tomatoes may or may not be given a
second sorting.

If the trimmings are to be thrown away, the large tomatoes don’t need to
be sorted, as the peelers will take care of that, and in this case a
good way is to put all the tomatoes through a rotary washer first, then
over a grader, and have the small tomatoes carefully sorted after the
grading is done. The large tomatoes pass from the grader to the scalder,
and thence to the peeling table or “merry-go-round,” where they are
peeled.

The best method to use if the trimmings are to be pulped will be
discussed later in the chapter.

The peeled tomatoes are thrown into a cutting machine which cuts them
into good-sized chunks, and drops them on a bucket conveyor which takes
them to the cooking kettles. The cutter should be so adjusted that it
will not make the tomatoes mushy. A few fair-sized pieces of tomato in a
bottle of chili sauce is nearly always pleasing to the consumer.

It is important that the peeling be thorough. Each bucket should be
inspected before the tomatoes are thrown into the chopper. Pieces of
peeling in chili sauce are very noticeable when the product is used, and
make an unfavorable impression.


                     Amount of Tomatoes and Onions

It takes just about 72 fourteen-quart buckets of peeled tomatoes of
average firmness to make 100 gallons of finished chili sauce. For this
same amount about 100 lbs. of chopped onions should be used. The onions
should be very carefully peeled, and very finely chopped. If this
chopping is not done fine enough the pieces of onion will stop up the
tubes of the filling machine. It is best to use only large onions for
chili sauce, as it takes a great many women to peel the required amount
if small ones are used, and the waste on the small ones is considerable
when the peeling must be done so thoroughly.

The cooking is carried out the same as in catsup, and the same
ingredients are used, with the possible exception of garlic, which, so
far as I know, is not often used in chili sauce.


                                 Spices

The spicing is very similar to catsup. In some brands about twice as
much cayenne is used as was suggested for catsup, while other brands are
spiced mildly. One of the best liked brands on the market is quite mild,
and another brand which is equally popular is quite hot.


                        Salt, Sugar and Vinegar

The same amounts of salt and vinegar are used as in catsup, and they are
added in exactly the same manner. About 10 lbs. more of sugar is needed
for a 100–gallon batch than is used in catsup. This is probably
necessitated by the large amount of onions used.


                        Testing Finishing Point

Testing the point at which the cooking is completed must be done by the
eye. The hydrometer can not be used, as chili sauce is too lumpy. A
hydrometer can only be used when the product is smooth and homogeneous.
By a little experience the cook will soon learn to judge the finishing
point. It is that point at which very little water runs from the lumps
of tomatoes when the chili sauce is hot, and practically no free water
shows when a little of it is cooled in a saucepan. In my opinion the
finishing point of chili sauce is easier to judge by the eye than it is
on catsup.


                   Filling, Sealing, and Sterilizing

As to filling, sealing, sterilizing or not sterilizing, labeling,
stacking, etc., the same remarks apply to chili sauce as to catsup. The
filling is somewhat more difficult, as the product is lumpy, and a
special filling tube must be used. As to whether an automatic rotary
filler similar to that used for catsup is ever used for chili sauce I do
not know. I have always filled it with one of the old style catsup
fillers, using a special filling tube.

On account of the fact that a wide-mouthed bottle is used, there is even
more danger of air leakage in the neck of the bottle, causing “black
neck,” than there is in catsup. It is a common sight to see chili sauce
with an inch, or even two inches, of blackening at the top of the
bottle. Sometimes the very finest quality of cork is used, and then
paraffin is put over that, but even then we find that this darkening is
not avoided. I recommend the same procedure here as was given when
discussing this subject on catsup.

If a crown seal, either plain or of the self-opening type, is used as
the closure, a pure cork insert should be used. As mentioned in a
previous chapter, the composition cork insert does not work as well on
wide-mouthed bottles as it does on those with a narrow mouth.

The remarks which were made on the packing of No. 10 and gallon catsup
also apply to the packing of chili sauce in these sizes.


                          Microscopical Counts

The counts of molds, yeasts and spores, and bacteria in chili sauce
usually run very low. I have never seen a sample that ran high in molds,
and very few that ran high in the other counts. The molds seldom run
higher than 10, and counts of zero are often obtained. This is because
practically all of the mold in tomatoes is on the outside and clings to
the peeling. When the peeling is removed the mold is removed. As the
peeled tomatoes are usually cut and cooked immediately after they are
peeled, there is very little opportunity for the multiplication of
yeasts and bacteria.


                         Pulping the Trimmings

Trimming pulp, or “skin and core,” as it is sometimes called, is made
from that part of the tomato which is removed when the tomatoes are
peeled. This consists of the peeling, with the tomato substance which
clings to it, and the hard core at the stem end of the tomato.

In as much as practically all of the mold in or on the tomatoes is
retained in the trimmings, it is not an easy matter to work these
trimmings up into a product which will mark up to the government
requirements, and do it economically. If the tomatoes are firm and
largely free from cracks around the stem end it is not so bad, but when
they come in badly cracked, with tufts of mold growing in all the
cracks, as is often the case late in the season, the amount of labor
required to properly sort them makes the working up of trimmings
unprofitable.

When the trimmings show up fairly well, and the labor to handle them is
available, there is no reason why the chili sauce packer or tomato
canner should not utilize what would otherwise be a waste by turning it
into pulp or “trimming catsup.”


                  Government Attitude on Trimming Pulp

The government does not object to the manufacture of tomato products
from trimmings, but they demand that the product comply with the
regulations as to micro-organisms, and that it be sold for exactly what
it is, and if put up for sale to the consuming public, that it be
labeled—“made from pieces of tomatoes,” or, “made from tomato
trimmings,” or, if small tomatoes are worked up with the trimmings,
“made from small tomatoes and tomato trimmings,” or, “made from small
tomatoes and pieces of tomatoes.”


         Method of Handling Tomatoes When Trimmings Are Pulped

If the trimmings are to be pulped the tomatoes must be very carefully
sorted, and thoroughly washed, preferably in a rotary washer. As it is
practically impossible to sort or wash the trimmings, the tomatoes must
be in almost perfect condition when they enter the scalder. Washing the
trimmings carries away too much of the tomato substance which clings to
them, and sorting is not practicable, as the soft rot and mold becomes
incorporated in the entire mass and it is impossible to separate it. The
peelers can not be depended upon to sort out any substantial amount of
rot when they do the peeling. Therefore the only thing that can be done
toward keeping down the micro-organisms is _painstaking sorting of the
whole tomatoes and thorough washing_ to keep out the mold, having the
conveying equipment and tanks clean, and bringing the trimmings to a
boil quickly to prevent multiplication of yeasts and bacteria. It is
wise to steam out the peeling buckets and bucket conveyors at noon, as
well as at quitting time, as the juice which lies in them is constantly
undergoing fermentation.

When the trimmings are pulped, either alone or with the small tomatoes,
the tomatoes are all washed and sorted before they are graded. The
trimmings should be cooked before they are run through the pulp
finisher, so as to get all of the clinging tomato substance cooked away
from the skin. The density to which to cook the trimmings can be judged
fairly well by the eye, or the specific gravity test by weighing can be
used.

The pulp is canned the same as whole pulp.



                              CHAPTER XII
                     THE MANUFACTURE OF TOMATO SOUP


                 Convenience and Economy of Canned Soup

Canned tomato soup is a commodity which is increasing in favor with the
housewife. The old method of preparing this soup in the home was to open
a can of tomatoes, strain it through a colander, and stew it, adding
butter, salt, sugar, spices, flour, and perhaps soda and milk. The
modern way is to immerse a can of condensed tomato soup in boiling water
for five minutes, open it, and mix the contents with an equal volume of
hot water or hot milk. How much more convenient the modern way is, and
when the quality is just as good and often better than can be obtained
the long troublesome way, it is natural that canned tomato soup should
become increasingly popular. Buying the canned soup is also cheaper than
buying the canned tomatoes and making the soup from them.


                   Factors Upon Which Success Depends

The maker of tomato soup should be a crank on quality. There is no other
tomato product in which quality is at a greater premium. In catsup and
chili sauce, heavy spicing and mixing with lots of vinegar and sugar
help to mask the tomato flavor, but in soup the spicing is light, no
vinegar is used, and being eaten as a food in itself, instead of as a
condiment with which to flavor a food, the palate quickly detects
inferiority. Also, the palate is just as quick to detect that pleasing
fresh tomato taste which should be the basis of all good soup.

The quality of the tomato stock is the real important thing. Fresh
tomatoes may be used or a fine grade of pulp may be used, and either
will make an excellent soup. With poor tomato stock a good soup cannot
be made no matter what you do to it. Spicing artistically, and making
rich by the use of plenty of good butter, will not make amends for poor
quality of tomato stock.

To succeed in making tomato soup the manufacturer must at least make
good on the following counts: first, his soup must be palatable, that
is, pleasing, to the taste with no lingering unpleasant after-taste;
second, it must not be too sweet or too sour; third, it must be uniform
in consistency, smooth when poured out of the can, and must not get
lumpy or grainy after being in storage a long time; fourth, it must not
curdle fresh milk, even though the housewife adds no baking soda when
mixing milk with it; fifth, it must be reasonable in price and
attractively packed in popular sizes.


                             Unpalatability

I will discuss these points a little further. What makes tomato pulp
unpalatable and what causes an unpleasant after-taste? The most common
cause is poor tomato stock, or tomato stock which has been overcooked.
Such a foundation for soup will almost invariably leave a lingering
unpleasant after-taste in the mouth. Another thing is too much flour,
masking the flavor of the tomato and giving it a somewhat “pasty” taste.
Another thing is the injudicious use of spices, producing unpopular
flavors, or using one spice, such as bay leaves, for instance, in such
large proportion that almost every other flavor is masked. None of these
defects are rare in tomato soups, and they all cause unpalatability to
some extent.


                            Proper Sweetness

Getting proper sweetness is not nearly so easy as one might suppose. It
is not so difficult when the soup is made from fresh tomatoes, although
even then every batch must be tasted after all but a few pounds of the
sugar is added, and the amount of sugar varied according to the
sweetness of the tomatoes. When the weather is moderately dry, with
plenty of sunshine, the tomatoes are usually sweet and do not require so
much sugar, but tomatoes which ripen during rainy, dark, cold days are
not so sweet, and a little more sugar is needed.

When making soup from canned pulp it is necessary to watch the sweetness
of the pulp very close, and it may be necessary for the cook to vary the
sugar on a 100–gallon batch ten or fifteen pounds during a day’s run.
Canned pulp often varies greatly in sweetness, and if held in storage
for many months it often loses some of its sweetness on account of the
action of living, acid forming bacteria, which may not be present in
large amount, but nevertheless, in time, have a noticeable effect on the
sweetness of the pulp.

When pulp is purchased for the purpose of making soup its sweetness
should be one of the first considerations in passing judgment on it.


                        Gradual Souring of Pulp

When the soup manufacturer makes his own pulp and works it up into soup
during the winter months he will probably find that he will save on his
sugar bill if he will pack the pulp in No. 10 cans and sterilize it—at
least that part of the pulp which must be held in storage several
months. In this way living, acid forming bacteria are killed, and the
danger of the pulp losing its sweetness during months of storage is
greatly minimized.

The fact that the gradual souring of pulp in 5–gal. cans, even though
very slight, is due to the action of living, acid forming bacteria can
hardly be doubted. Bacteriological tests supplemented by chemical
analyses would determine the matter definitely, but there is evidence in
the experience of every canner to show that this souring is due to the
fact that the pulp is not sterile.

Canned tomatoes are always sterilized and can be kept in storage for
years without losing their sweetness. Pulp packed in 5–gallon cans is
not sterilized and quite a after-sterilization percentage of it will
lose much of its sweetness on being stored for six months, and after
being stored a year still more is lost. It takes hundreds of pounds of
expensive sugar to make up for this loss of sweetness when the pulp is
made into soup.


                                Sampling

Of course, a cook is not infallible in his judgment as to just what is
the right sweetness and he needs the co-operation of others at the
factory. The factory manager should make it a point to sample the soup
several times a day, and also to have others sample it. It is better to
have it just a little less sweet than it should be than to have it too
sweet. The consumer can always add a little sugar but cannot take any
out.

The third point mentioned above—that of uniform consistency and
smoothness, will be discussed fully under the cooking and shaking
processes.


                             Proper Acidity

I stated as the fourth point that the soup should not curdle fresh milk,
even though no soda is added by the housewife. One of the favorite ways
of preparing canned tomato soup in the home is to mix it with an equal
quantity of hot milk. The experienced housewife knows enough to add a
pinch of soda to the milk before adding the soup, and she may also know
that she will get a smoother mixture if she slowly pours the soup into
the milk, stirring constantly, than if she pours the milk into the soup.
The inexperienced housewife does not know these things, and often she
opens the can and mixes it with milk without reading the admonition on
the label as to how the cream of tomato soup should be prepared.
Sometimes she forgets to add the soda, or does not thoroughly dissolve
it, or does not add enough of it, and then there is disappointment. In
order to guard against such disappointments the soup canner should so
prepare his product that curdling of the milk cannot occur under any
method of mixing. The way to do this is to add enough soda to the soup
to reduce the acidity to a point where it will not curdle fresh milk,
whether the soup is poured into the milk or the milk into the soup. The
canner can then print a notice on the label of the can to the effect
that it is not necessary to add soda to this soup when preparing it as
“cream of tomato,” as the soda is already in it.

The acidity of the tomato is the active principle which causes the milk
to curdle. If this acidity runs 0.60% it will curdle the milk badly. If
it is reduced to 0.50% it will still curdle the milk, but if it is
reduced to 0.40% it will not curdle the milk, if the milk is fresh. The
aim of the soup maker should therefore be to keep the acidity of the
soup between 0.30 and 0.40%, not allowing it to go above or below these
limits. If it is reduced below 0.30% the flavor of the tomato begins to
be effected—in fact, if possible, it is best to keep the acidity between
0.35 and 0.40% to avoid any possibility of loss of tomato flavor.

Now, the packer will ask—“How am I going to do this acidity testing? I’m
not a chemist, and have no chemist at my factory, or any laboratory.”
The acidity test on pulp and soup is a very simple one. The equipment
required scarcely amounts to anything, as the sample can be taken by
volume. Any chemist will be glad to show you how to make this test and
to secure for you the few accessories needed.

Why is there less danger of curdling if the soup is poured into the milk
than if the milk is poured into the soup? The soup contains all the
acid, and the milk contains none. If the soup is poured into the milk
slowly, with stirring, the acid is slowly added to the milk, and is
diluted, there being at the beginning of the mixing a very small volume
of acid and a large amount of milk. If, however, the milk is added to
the soup, a small volume of milk is at first being thrown into a large
volume of acid, and naturally the danger of curdling is considerably
increased. But if the acidity of the soup is not above 0.40% and the
milk is fresh, there will not be an appreciable amount of curdling no
matter which way the two are mixed. A statement as to the proper way of
mixing with milk should be made on the label.


                           Price and Quality

That the soup, to be a success, must be popular in price and packed in
convenient sizes is self evident, and there is no need of dwelling on
this point. Practically all of the tomato soup on the market is packed
either in the 10½ oz. or 16 oz. size, and almost all of it is cheap in
comparison with other foods, but it is a mistake to cut the quality one
iota in order to shade the price. The mark for quality should be set at
the highest point possible and the price to correspond. The canner may
book a lot of new business with a low price and mediocre quality but he
is not likely to hold it. Almost anyone would rather pay a cent a can
more and get better quality.


                          Microscopical Counts

The first operations in soup making are the same as in pulp. The same
care must be taken in sorting and washing the tomatoes, and the
government authorities put soup on the same basis as other tomato
products when it comes to microscopical analysis. The fact that soup
contains flour and butter makes the counting of yeasts, spores, and
bacteria under the microscope a difficult operation. The molds, however,
show up almost as well in soup as they do in pulp.


                   Beginning the Cook and Adding Soda

The tomatoes must be cycloned before they are converted into soup.
Crushed tomatoes will not do. The cycloned juice for each batch is
measured in the same manner as for catsup, and any of the types of
cooking kettles that are used for catsup are satisfactory for soup. For
a 100 gallon batch of finished soup, using the amount of flour I am
going to recommend, about 28 or 29 bushels of tomatoes will be required.
As soon as all of the tomato juice for the batch is boiling in the
cooking kettle the soda is added. The amount of bicarbonate of soda to
use depends upon whether the soup is being made from fresh tomatoes or
pulp, and if made from pulp the soda should be varied according to the
pulp’s acidity. It is nearly always necessary to use more soda in pulp
than in fresh tomatoes, and if the pulp is old goods which has lost much
of its sweetness, and in which the acid has been increased by the slow
but telling action of living bacteria, still more soda must be used.

For fresh tomatoes 18 to 20 oz. of soda is enough for a batch of 100
gallons when finished, but for pulp, as high as 30 oz. may be required.
If it takes more than this to reduce the acidity of the pulp to the
proper point, that pulp had better be used for some other purpose than
soup. There is a limit as to the amount of soda that can be added
without loss of tomato flavor.

The soda is added a little at a time while the pulp or tomato juice is
boiling. The cook must allow considerable room for effervescing, so that
the formation of the carbonic acid gas will not cause much of the
contents to be lost by flowing over the top of the kettle. Cutting the
foaming tomato juice with a sharp spray from the hose will help to keep
the effervescing mass down.


                       Butter, Spices and Onions

After the effervescence from the addition of the soda has stopped, the
butter, spice, and onion are added. Of course, the more butter that is
added the richer the soup will be, but the idea should be to give the
soup the butter flavor without adding so much that the cost will mount
up beyond a reasonable limit. I would suggest 6 or 7 lbs. of butter to
100 gallons of finished soup. The butter will so thoroughly distribute
itself during the boiling that every drop of the soup will contain
practically the same amount. It is not necessary to use a fancy print of
butter. If the butter is a little mottled, or the salt isn’t quite as
evenly incorporated in it as it should be it makes no difference, as the
butter fat and salt all become evenly distributed in the soup after
boiling for a minute or two. The butter, however, should be sweet and
clean. Rancid butter should not be used.

Soup should not be heavily spiced, as many people do not like highly
seasoned soups, and if it isn’t hot enough for some consumers they can
add as much pepper as they want to. So far as I know the spices most
commonly used are white pepper, paprika, cassia, mace, cloves, bay
leaves, and celery salt. Black pepper should not be used at it makes
black specks in the soup which are apt to be mistaken for dirt. About 7
oz. of white pepper to 100 gallons of finished soup will give it
sufficient spiciness. If paprika is used this can be cut down somewhat.
Cassia, mace or cloves are used in small amount, 1 oz. of either being
ample.

Pepper, cloves, and cassia are added at the beginning of the cooking and
mace is added just a few minutes before the flour. It is said that
celery salt gives tomato soup a very nice flavor but I have never tried
it. Some people like bay leaves, but I have tasted canned tomato soup
with a very decided bay leaf taste which I thought was about as poor as
any soup I have ever tasted.

The onions are chopped the same as for catsup, and 4 lbs. is about the
right amount for 100 gallons of soup.


                             Sugar and Salt

The sugar can be added at any time after the spices, butter, and onions,
but about 5 lbs. should be held back from the average amount being used,
figuring that we are cooking a 100 gallon batch, and after the sugar and
salt is in, the contents of the kettle should be tasted before the
balance of the sugar is added. It may be that the last 5 lbs. are not
needed, or it may be that all of it is needed and also an additional 5
lbs. For fresh tomatoes about 25 or 30 lbs. of sugar may be sufficient
for a 100 gallon batch, and for pulp it may be necessary to use as much
as 50 lbs. or even 60 lbs. in some cases.

After the condensation has continued until the boiling mass is of the
consistency of thin pulp the salt is added. The same grade of salt is
used as for catsup, and about 14 lbs. is the right amount. The sugar and
salt should be put in small containers or pails and scattered slowly
over the surface of the boiling pulp.


                 Testing Thickness Before Adding Flour

Now the contents of the kettle contain all of the ingredients except the
flour and the water which is mixed with the flour when it is added.
Before this flour mixture is added the contents of the kettle must be
condensed to a definite thickness. If this thickness is not measured
with a fair degree of accuracy the finished soup will either be so thick
that it will be lumpy in the can, even after shaking, or it will be so
thin that the housewife is apt to feel that she is getting cheated when
she pours the soup out of the can. The object to attain should be to
have the soup as thick as the consumer could reasonably expect, but at
the same time to have it of such consistency that it will pour out of
the can easily and smoothly. Nobody wants soup that will come out of the
can like a brick, but at the same time they expect condensed soup to be
reasonably thick.

I prefer to gauge the point at which it is time for the flour to be
added with a hydrometer. The use of the hydrometer here is subject to
the same precautions as were described under the testing of pulp, and it
is used in the same way. Whatever reading pulp of specific gravity 1.04
gives on the hydrometer you use, that is the reading you should take for
the point at which to add the flour mixture on soup. If you follow this
rule you will come out all right. We will say that pulp of the degree of
fineness you have reads twenty degrees on your hydrometer when it is at
a specific gravity of 1.04. Then twenty degrees on this hydrometer is
the point at which the flour mixture should be added on soup.

It might occur to you that it would be a good idea to use the specific
gravity test by weighing to determine the point at which to add the
flour. This would work all right if you used the same amount of sugar
all the time, but as varying quantities of sugar will vary the specific
gravity without materially varying the thickness of the pulp, using the
specific gravity test by weighing at this point is apt to throw you off.
This varying amount of sugar will have a slight effect on the hydrometer
reading also, but not enough to make an appreciable difference. What you
really want is to have your partially completed soup at a uniform
thickness before adding the flour, rather than at a uniform specific
gravity. Thickness and specific gravity do not always correspond. Tomato
fiber may be very thick and still have a rather low specific gravity,
and it may be thin and have a high specific gravity due to the fact that
it contains added sugar in solution. For determining the point which we
are trying to gauge, the hydrometer is much less apt to throw you off
the track than is a specific gravity test by weighing, as increasing
thickness will change the hydrometer reading very quickly but will only
alter the specific gravity slowly.

We will say that we have found out that 20 degrees on the hydrometer is
the proper point at which to add the flour mixture—that this degree of
thickness, with the added thickness produced by the flour mixture,
produces a soup, which when cold and well shaken, will be thick enough,
but will also pour out of the can easily and smoothly. We test the
boiling liquid several times; it runs 14 degrees, then after a few
minutes 18 degrees, then 20, and it is time to add the flour.


                              Adding Flour

The flour must be smoothly mixed with water in a flour mixer with sifter
attachment. For a 100 gallon batch of soup I would recommend 40 lbs. of
hard flour and 13 gallons of water. The hard flour seems to give the
best results. The water is placed in the bottom of the mixer and the
mixing attachments (paddles and sifter) set in motion either by a
separate motor or by a belt from a line of shaft. The flour is then
poured through the revolving sifter and is brushed through as a fine
powder, which the paddles slowly work into the water without allowing
lumps to form. When the total amount of flour is added to the water, and
the paddles have worked the mixture up smooth, the flour mixture is
added to the boiling contents of the kettle, either in pails or by means
of enamel lined pipe running from the mixer to the cooking kettles. The
contents of the kettle should be at a vigorous boil when the flour is
added, and the flour mixture should not be thrown in so fast that it
will kill the boil. During this process the boiling mass should be
stirred vigorously with a long paddle. After all the flour is in the
kettle the boil is continued for ten minutes, after which time the batch
of soup is done and ready to be let down into the finishing machine.


                         Filling and Processing

From the finisher it is conducted to a receiving tank, and thence to the
filling machine. A large volume of soup should not be kept ahead in the
receiving tank as it cools and may get somewhat lumpy. The hotter it is
canned, the better, and it should be placed in the process tanks
immediately after canning.

It is usually canned in No. 1, 16 oz., and No. 10 cans, and is filled
with a rotary filling machine of the type used for heavy liquids.

It may be processed either in straight process tanks or in a continuous
agitating pasteurizer. If the straight stationary tanks are used the
following time is given in boiling water: No. 1, 30 minutes; 16 oz., 40
minutes; No. 10, 1 hour. If a continuous agitating pasteurizer is used
this time can be cut down about 60%.

As soon as the processing is completed the cans should be gradually
cooled in cold water and left in the cold water until the outside has
cooled sufficiently to allow them to be handled easily. On account of
the flour it contains soup holds its heat a long time, and it should be
properly cooled before stacking away.


                          Shaking and Labeling

Before shaking and labeling it is wise to let the soup stand for about
ten days, both to give leaks a chance to show up, and to give the
contents of the can a chance to thoroughly “set.” If the soup is shaken
too soon after it is canned there is a possibility of it coagulating
again, but this will be avoided if the soup is allowed to stand long
enough before shaking—10 days being ample.

Before the soup is shaken it will be in a jelly-like mass, and if dumped
out of the can just as it is it will have this jelly-like appearance and
look lumpy. Shaking makes it smooth, and also makes it flow easily from
the can. The shaking should be thorough, and the type of shaking machine
that is used for canned corn answers the purpose better than anything.
Shaking by hand is very tedious and trying on the employee, and as a
rule hand shaking isn’t as thorough as it should be. The shaking is done
at the same time as the labeling, and from the shaker the cans pass
through the labeling machine without a second handling. The small sizes
are usually packed four dozen to the case, and the No. 10’s six cans to
the case.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



                     “TAG” INDICATING THERMOMETERS

[Illustration: Handled Top Thermometer]

[Illustration: Adjustable Connection Thermometer]

FOR TOMATO PULP BOILING, CATSUP KETTLES, SCALDING TANKS, PASTEURIZERS,
STERILIZERS, TANKS, VATS, Etc.

  =have been especially designed= to meet the exacting requirements of
  tomato product manufacturers and represent the ultimate perfection of
  150 years of thermometer development and progress.

  =Permanent accuracy is guaranteed= because each tube is “seasoned” to
  prevent future false readings due to shrinkage of the glass.

  =Actual temperature conditions= are reproduced similar to those which
  the instrument will encounter in later use due to the “TAG” method of
  “pointing” and making a special scale for each thermometer.

       _Bulletin T–305 will provide further details of interest_

                        C. J. TAGLIABUE MFG. CO.
                       18–88 Thirty-third Street
                            Brooklyn, N. Y.

[Illustration: Adjustable Clamp Hook]

[Illustration: Regular Angle Union Connection]

[Illustration: Wood Threaded Hub]

[Illustration: Straight Flange]

[Illustration: Pipe Threaded Hub]

[Illustration: Straight Form Fixed Connection]

[Illustration: Adjustable Clamp Flange]

------------------------------------------------------------------------



[Illustration]

                      “TAG” Recording Thermometers

  For Cookers, Scalders, Pasteurizers, Sterilizers, Vats, Tanks, Etc.


  =are extremely accurate and reliable= because they have been designed
  along sound and correct principles, also due to their simplicity of
  construction.

  =Uniformity of results is assured= because these instruments
  faithfully record every temperature operation, day or night, thereby
  promoting _efficiency_ and helpful competition among the workmen in
  their efforts to produce praise-worthy charts.

  =Made in both= full-nickeled bronze and japanned iron cases with
  nickel ring, in 8, 10 and 12–inch sizes, with 12, 24–hour or seven day
  charts.

             _For further details write for Bulletin T–305_

                        C. J. TAGLIABUE MFG. CO.
              18–88 Thirty-third St.      Brooklyn, N. Y.

[Illustration]



[Illustration]

[Illustration: “_The Reeves_”]

                      Variable Speed Transmission

is ideal for regulating the speed of your Tomato Sorting Belt. You can
get any speed even to a fraction of a revolution at any time by simply
turning a small hand wheel. It is so simple that even a child can
operate it and get variation as low as two to one or as high as ten to
one. It is admirably adapted for regulating not only the Tomato Sorting
Belt but Cappers, Fillers, Exhausters, Pea Blanchers, Viners or any kind
of vegetables or fruit packing machines where a variation of speed is
desired.

Write for Canner’s bulletin C–170 and see how other Canners have
profited by the use of “THE REEVES” Variable Speed Transmission.

                         REEVES PULLEY COMPANY
                           Columbus, Indiana


     Members of
         Wholesale Grocers’ Exchange. Chicago
         National Pickle Packers’ Association
         National Kraut Packers’ Association
         National Canned Goods and Dried Fruit Brokers’ Association

                          C. J. Sutphen & Co.
                   Brokers and Manufacturers’ Agents
                       140 North Dearborn Street
                                CHICAGO

                            Pickles
                            Sauer Kraut
                            Tomato Products
                            Vinegar
                            Canned Goods

                                                 _Twenty-five Years’
                                                 Experience
                                                 Pickles and Condiments_


                       Jeffrey Canning Machinery

[Illustration:

  The Jeffrey Binless Peeling Table. Absolutely Sanitary. Built in sizes
    to accommodate 44 to 400 peelers.
]

                     _Includes a complete line of_

             Peeling-Tables.
             Conveyers for handling all kinds of materials.
             Chains—all types.
             Power Transmission Machinery.
             Sprockets—Buckets.

                          Write for Catalogues

                     The Jeffrey Manufacturing Co.
                 940 N. 4th Street      Columbus, Ohio



[Illustration]

                        Pfaudler Cooking Kettle

        For Tomato Pulp, Catsup, Chili Sauce, Tomato Soup, Etc.

  This tank is 72 inches inside diameter, 72 inches deep and has a
  capacity of 1,336 gallons. It is made in one piece of sheet steel
  without any joints or crevices, and is lined with Pfaudler Glass
  Enamel. It may be equipped with any standard coil.

  The outside and bottom should be insulated with asbestos to prevent
  loss of heat by radiation.

  Quick cooking.
  No burning.
  Long lived.
  Easily cleaned.
  Always ready for use.
  Prevents discoloration of the product due to metallic contamination.

                   _Lined with Pfaudler Glass Enamel_

                             New York
                             Chicago
                             San Francisco
                             Detroit
                             St. Louis

                          The Pfaudler Company
                          Rochester, New York



[Illustration]

                       Hot Tomato Pulp and Catsup

   (For holding at predetermined temperature after cooking and while
                          awaiting bottling.)

=The Jacket= is connected with a small expansion tank and is thus kept
filled with water. Steam is passed into the coil in the jacket heating
this water. This method of heating has been found to give a close
control of temperature so that super-heating of the contents is avoided.

=The Brass Agitator= gives a slow, thorough mixing without violent
disturbance of the contents and thus avoids driving off the more
delicate aromatic flavors.

                    Lined with Pfaudler Glass Enamel

Can be had in different capacities from 150 gallons upwards.

                             New York
                             Chicago
                             San Francisco
                             Detroit
                             St. Louis

                          The Pfaudler Company
                            Rochester, N. Y.



[Illustration]

                     Cooking Kettle for Tomato Pulp

[Illustration: ELYRIA GLASS-ENAMELED EQUIPMENT]

                    “The Acme of Canning Apparatus”

ELYRIA GLASS ENAMEL—tough, elastic, a part of the fiber of the steel
itself—is the ideal equipment for the manufacture of tomato products.
The sanitary qualities of =glass= and its acid-resisting properties are
combined with the rugged wearing qualities of steel. Seams, rivets,
crevices for the lodgment of waste substances are eliminated, and the
smooth, hard, polished interior of the tank presents the finished
surface of a glass bowl and can be cleaned easily, quickly and
=absolutely=.

     Send for our Special Bulletin of Canning Apparatus—it will prove
                       interesting and instructive

                    The Elyria Enameled Products Co.
                         Elyria, Ohio, U. S. A.

                             New York
                             Chicago
                             Pittsburgh
                             San Francisco
                             Los Angeles



                Kelso Pulp and Catsup Finishing Machine

[Illustration]

A Machine adapted for making Tomato Pulp for Catsup and for finishing
Catsup and for preparing Fruit Products such as Apples, Plums, Prunes,
Strawberries, etc., for canning.

[Illustration]

                        Victoria Paring Machine

For Peeling =Onions=, Potatoes, Beets, Sweet Potatoes, Horse Radish
Roots, etc., in large quantities. Working Capacity 1 bushel per minute.
Saves 75% labor and 25% material.

  Send for our Catalogue of Special Machinery and supplies for Cider and
  Vinegar Manufacturers, Picklers, Canners, Preservers, Bottlers.

                            KELSO & COMPANY
                  559 W. Quincy St.      Chicago, Ill.



                           World Can Labeler

[Illustration]

  An up-to-the-minute machine, made by manufacturers of broad experience
                  in various kinds of labeling problems.

                Quickly adjustable to different sizes.
                Only one kind of gum needed.
                No dripping of gum—no wasted labels.
                Speedy and durable—mechanically correct.

                     _You should know all about it.
                         Send for particulars._

                         Economic Machinery Co.
                            Worcester, Mass.

   Makers of the well-known World Labeler for bottles, jars, tumblers,
                            and other packages



[Illustration: SPRAGUE WORKS—THE HOME OF THE SIGN OF QUALITY]

    Builders of Complete Equipment for Canning and Preserving Plants

The only manufacturers who are prepared to supply your requirements in
canning factory machinery, complete, in every detail, backed up by
thirty years of experience and a money back guarantee of satisfaction.

                     Sprague Canning Machinery Co.
                     General Offices: Chicago, Ill.
                        Factory: Hoopeston, Ill.

                  Eastern Branch:
                      Sheppard Supply & Equipment Co.
                      37 So. Charles St.,
                      Baltimore, Md.

                  Western Agents:
                      Premier Machinery Co.
                      16 California St.,
                      San Francisco, Cal.



[Illustration: “_Set It and Forget It_”]

                                  =NO=

                             COMPRESSED AIR
                            SKILLED LABOR OR
                            COSTLY SPOILAGE


                                “=TAG=”

                             SELF-OPERATING
                              TEMPERATURE
                              CONTROLLERS

=Uniform processing=, an economic necessity in the manufacture of tomato
products, depends upon a _uniform_ temperature constantly maintained
within the cookers.

=Fluctuating temperatures=, common to _hand_ regulation of the steam
inlet valves, therefore, must be eliminated.

=A simple solution= is provided by installing “TAG” Self-Operating
Temperature Controllers—a device which requires _no compressed air_ and
is so simple to operate that all the workman need do is to “_set_” the
controller for the desired temperature and “_forget it_.”

  =Pasteurizing=, =sterilizing=, etc., to an efficient degree can also
  be easily accomplished with these anti-spoilage and self-paying
  controllers.

              _For further details ask for Bulletin T–386_

                        C. J. TAGLIABUE MFG. CO.
                18–88 Thirty-third St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



                          TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES


 1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
 2. Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.
 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
 4. Enclosed bold font in =equals=.



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